Network Working Group K. Rehbehn Request for Comments: 2954 Megisto Systems Obsoletes: 1604 D. Fowler Category: Standards Track Syndesis Limited October 2000 Definitions of Managed Objects for Frame Relay Service Status of this Memo This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Copyright Notice Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000). All Rights Reserved. Abstract This memo defines an extension to the Management Information Base (MIB) for use with network management protocols in Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol-based (TCP/IP) internets. In particular, it defines objects for managing the frame relay service. This document obsoletes RFC 1604. Table of Contents 1 The SNMP Management Framework ................................ 2 2 Overview ..................................................... 3 2.1 Scope of MIB ............................................... 3 2.2 Transiting Multiple Frame Relay Networks ................... 5 2.3 Access Control ............................................. 5 2.4 Frame Relay Service MIB Terminology ........................ 6 2.5 Relation to Other MIBs ..................................... 8 2.5.1 System Group ............................................. 8 2.5.2 Interfaces Table (ifTable, ifXtable) ..................... 8 2.5.3 Stack Table for DS1/E1 Environment ....................... 12 2.5.4 Stack Table for V.35 Environments ........................ 14 2.5.5 The Frame Relay/ATM PVC Service Interworking MIB ......... 14 2.6 Textual Convention Change .................................. 15 3 Object Definitions ........................................... 15 3.1 The Frame Relay Service Logical Port ....................... 17 Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 1] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 3.2 Frame Relay Management VC Signaling ........................ 22 3.3 Frame Relay PVC End-Points ................................. 32 3.4 Frame Relay PVC Connections ................................ 45 3.5 Frame Relay Accounting ..................................... 53 3.6 Frame Relay Network Service Notifications .................. 56 3.7 Conformance Information .................................... 57 4 Acknowledgments .............................................. 67 5 References ................................................... 67 6 Security Considerations ...................................... 69 7 Authors' Addresses ........................................... 70 APPENDIX A Update Information .................................. 71 Intellectual Property Rights ................................... 75 Full Copyright Statement ....................................... 76 1. The SNMP Management Framework The SNMP Management Framework presently consists of five major components: o An overall architecture, described in RFC 2571 [1]. o Mechanisms for describing and naming objects and events for the purpose of management. The first version of this Structure of Management Information (SMI) is called SMIv1 and described in STD 16, RFC 1155 [2], STD 16, RFC 1212 [3] and RFC 1215 [4]. The second version, called SMIv2, is described in STD 58, RFC 2578 [5], STD 58, RFC 2579 [6] and STD 58, RFC 2580 [7]. o Message protocols for transferring management information. The first version of the SNMP message protocol is called SNMPv1 and described in STD 15, RFC 1157 [8]. A second version of the SNMP message protocol, which is not an Internet standards track protocol, is called SNMPv2c and described in RFC 1901 [9] and RFC 1906 [10]. The third version of the message protocol is called SNMPv3 and described in RFC 1906 [10], RFC 2572 [11] and RFC 2574 [12]. o Protocol operations for accessing management information. The first set of protocol operations and associated PDU formats is described in STD 15, RFC 1157 [8]. A second set of protocol operations and associated PDU formats is described in RFC 1905 [13]. o A set of fundamental applications described in RFC 2573 [14] and the view-based access control mechanism described in RFC 2575 [15]. Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 2] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 A more detailed introduction to the current SNMP Management Framework can be found in RFC 2570 [16]. Managed objects are accessed via a virtual information store, termed the Management Information Base or MIB. Objects in the MIB are defined using the mechanisms defined in the SMI. This memo specifies a MIB module that is compliant to the SMIv2. A MIB conforming to the SMIv1 can be produced through the appropriate translations. The resulting translated MIB must be semantically equivalent, except where objects or events are omitted because no translation is possible (use of Counter64). Some machine readable information in SMIv2 will be converted into textual descriptions in SMIv1 during the translation process. However, this loss of machine readable information is not considered to change the semantics of the MIB. 2. Overview These objects are used to manage a frame relay Service. At present, this applies to the following value of the ifType variable in the IF-MIB [26]: frameRelayService (44) This section provides an overview and background of how to use this MIB and other potential MIBs to manage a frame relay service. 2.1. Scope of MIB The Frame Relay Service MIB supports Customer Network Management (CNM) of a frame relay network service. Through the use of this and other related MIBs, a frame relay service customer's NMS can monitor the customer's UNI/NNI logical ports and PVCs. It provides customers with access to configuration data, performance monitoring information, and fault detection for the delivered frame relay service. As an option, an SNMP agent supporting the Frame Relay Service MIB may allow customer-initiated PVC management operations such as creation, deletion, modification, activation, and deactivation of individual PVCs. However, internal aspects of the network (e.g., switching elements, line cards, and network routing tables) are beyond the scope of this MIB. The Frame Relay Service MIB models all interfaces and PVCs delivered by a frame relay service within a single virtual SNMP system for the purpose of comprehensively representing the customer's frame relay service. The customer's interfaces and PVCs may physically exist on one or more devices within the network topology. An SNMP agent Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 3] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 providing support for the Frame Relay Service MIB as well as other appropriate MIBs to model a single virtual frame relay network service is referred to as a Frame Relay Service (FRS) agent. Internal communication mechanisms between the FRS agent and individual devices within the frame relay network delivering the service are implementation specific and beyond the scope of this MIB. The customer's NMS will typically access the SNMP agent implementing the Frame Relay Service MIB over a frame relay permanent virtual connection (PVC). SNMP access over a frame relay PVC is achieved through the use of SNMP over UDP over IP encapsulated in Frame Relay according to STD 55, RFC2427 and ITU X.36 Annex D [23]. Alternate access mechanisms and SNMP agent implementations are possible. This MIB will NOT be implemented on user equipment (e.g., DTE). Such devices are managed using the Frame Relay DTE MIB (RFC2115[18]). However, concentrators may use the Frame Relay Service MIB instead of the Frame Relay DTE MIB. This MIB does not define managed objects for the physical layer. Existing physical layer MIBs (e.g., DS1 MIB) and Interface MIB will be used as needed in FRS Agent implementations. This MIB supports frame relay PVCs. This MIB may be extended at a later time to handle frame relay SVCs. A switch implementation may support this MIB for the purpose of configuration and control of the frame relay service beyond the scope of traditional customer network management applications. A number of objects (e.g. frLportTypeAdmin) support administrative actions that impact the operation of frame relay switch equipment in the network. This is reflected in the differences between the two MIB compliance modules: o the frame relay service compliance module (frnetservCompliance), and o the frame relay switch compliance module (frnetSwitchCompliance). The frame relay service compliance module does not support the administrative control objects used for switch management. Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 4] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 2.2. Transiting Multiple Frame Relay Networks This MIB is only used to manage a single frame relay service offering from one network service provider. Therefore, if a customer PVC traverses multiple networks, then the customer must poll a different FRS agent within each frame relay network to retrieve the end-to-end view of service. Figure 1 illustrates a customer ("User B") NMS accessing FRS agents in three different frame relay networks (I, J, and K). +-------------------------------------+ | Customer Network Management Station | | (SNMP based) | +-------------------------------------+ ^ ^ ^ | | | | | | UNI | NNI | NNI | UNI | ^ | ^ | ^ | +-----------+ | +-----------+ | +-----------+ | | | | | | | | | | | Originating | | FR | | | FR | | | FR | |Terminating +--------+ | | Network I | | | Network J | | | Network K | | +--------+ | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |---| |---| |---| |---| User B | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | +--------+ | +-----------+ | +-----------+ | +-----------+ | +--------+ | | | | | | | | | PVC Segment 1 | PVC Segment 2 | PVC Segment 3 | |<------------->|<------------->|<------------->| | | | Multi-network PVC | |<--------------------------------------------->| | NNI = Network-to Network Interface | UNI = User-to-Network Interface Figure 1, Multi-network PVC 2.3. Access Control A frame relay network is shared amongst many frame relay subscribers. Each subscriber will only have access to their information (e.g., information with respect to their interfaces and PVCs). The FRS agent should provide instance level granularity for MIB views. Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 5] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 2.4. Frame Relay Service MIB Terminology Access Channel - An access channel generically refers to the DS1/E1 or DS3/E3-based UNI access channel or NNI access channel across which frame relay data transits. An access channel is the access pathway for a single stream of user data. Within a given DS1 line, an access channel can denote any one of the following: o Unchannelized DS1 - the entire DS1 line is considered an access channel. Each access channel is comprised of 24 DS0 time slots. o Channelized DS1 - an access channel is any one of 24 channels. Each access channel is comprised of a single DS0 time slot. o Fractional DS1 - an access channel is a grouping of NxDS0 time slots (NX56/64 Kbps, where N = 1-23 DS0 Time slots per Fractional DS1 Access Channel) that may be assigned in consecutive or non-consecutive order. Within a given E1 line, a channel can denote any one of the following: o Unchannelized E1 - the entire E1 line is considered a single access channel. Each access channel is comprised of 31 E1 time slots. o Channelized E1 - an access channel is any one of 31 channels. Each access channel is comprised of a single E1 time slot. o Fractional E1 - an access channel is a grouping of N E1 time slots (NX64 Kbps, where N = 1-30 E1 time slots per FE1 access channel) that may be assigned in consecutive or non-consecutive order. Within a given unformatted line, the entire unformatted line is considered an access channel. Examples include RS-232, V.35, V.36 and X.21 (non-switched), and unframed E1 (G.703 without G.704). Access Rate - The data rate of the access channel, expressed in bits/second. The speed of the user access channel determines how rapidly the end user can inject data into the network. Bc - The Committed Burst Size (Bc) is the maximum amount of subscriber data (expressed in bits) that the network agrees to transfer, under normal conditions, during a time interval Tc. Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 6] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 Be - The Excess Burst Size (Be) is the maximum amount of subscriber data (expressed in bits) in excess of Bc that the network will attempt to deliver during the time interval Tc. This data (Be) is delivered in general with a lower probability than Bc. CIR - The Committed Information Rate (CIR) is the subscriber data rate (expressed in bits/second) that the network commits to deliver under normal network conditions. CIR is averaged over the time interval Tc (CIR = Bc/Tc). DLCI - Data Link Connection Identifier Logical Port - This term is used to model the frame relay "interface" on a device. NNI - Network to Network Interface Permanent Virtual Connection (PVC) - A virtual connection that has its end-points and bearer capabilities defined at subscription time. Time slot (E1) - An octet within the 256-bit information field in each E1 frame is defined as a time slot. Time slots are position sensitive within the 256-bit information field. Fractional E1 service is provided in contiguous or non-contiguous time slot increments. Time slot (DS0) - An octet within the 192-bit information field in each DS1 frame is defined as a time slot. Time slots are position sensitive within the 192-bit information field. Fractional DS1 service is provided in contiguous or non-contiguous time slot increments. UNI - User to Network Interface N391 - Full status (status of all PVCs) polling counter N392 - Error threshold N393 - Monitored events count T391 - Link integrity verification polling timer T392 - Polling verification timer nT3 - Status enquiry timer nN3 - Maximum status enquiry counter Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 7] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 2.5. Relation to Other MIBs 2.5.1. System Group Use the System Group of the SNMPv2-MIB [27] to describe the Frame Relay Service (FRS) agent. The FRS agent may be monitoring many frame relay devices in one network. The System Group does not describe frame relay devices monitored by the FRS agent. sysDescr: ASCII string describing the FRS agent. Can be up to 255 characters long. This field is generally used to indicate the network providers identification and type of service offered. sysObjectID: Unique OBJECT IDENTIFIER (OID) for the FRS agent. sysUpTime: Clock in the FRS agent; TimeTicks in 1/100s of a second. Elapsed type since the FRS agent came on line. sysContact: Contact for the FRS agent. ASCII string of up to 255 characters. sysName: Domain name of the FRS agent, for example, acme.com sysLocation: Location of the FRS agent. ASCII string of up to 255 characters. sysServices: Services of the managed device. The value "2", which implies that the frame relay network is providing a subnetwork level service, is recommended. 2.5.2. Interfaces Table (ifTable, ifXtable) This specifies how the Interfaces Group defined in the IF MIB [26] shall be used for the management of frame relay based interfaces, and in conjunction with the Frame Relay Service MIB module. This memo assumes the interpretation of the evolution of the Interfaces group to be in accordance with: "The interfaces table (ifTable) contains information on the managed resource's interfaces. Each sub-layer below the internetwork layer of a network interface is considered an interface." Thus, the ifTable allows the following frame relay-based interfaces to be represented as table entries: Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 8] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 - Frame relay interfaces in equipment (e.g., switches, routers or networks) supporting frame relay. This level is concerned with generic frame counts and not with individual virtual connections. In accordance with the guidelines of ifTable, frame counts per virtual connection are not covered by ifTable, and are considered interface specific and covered in the Frame Relay Service MIB module. In order to interrelate the ifEntries properly, the Interfaces Stack Group shall be supported. Some specific interpretations of ifTable for frame relay follow. Object Use for the generic Frame Relay layer ====== ============================================= ifIndex Each frame relay port is represented by an ifEntry. ifDescr Description of the frame relay interface. ASCII string describing the UNI/NNI logical port. Can be up to 255 characters long. ifType The value allocated for Frame Relay Service is equal to 44. ifMtu Set to maximum frame size in octets for this frame relay logical port. ifSpeed Peak bandwidth in bits per second available for use. This could be the speed of the logical port and not the access rate. Actual user information transfer rate (i.e., access rate) of the UNI or NNI logical port in bits per second (this is not the clocking speed). For example, it is 1,536,000 bits per second for a DS1-based UNI/NNI logical port and 1,984,000 bits per second for an E1-based UNI/NNI logical port. ifPhysAddress The primary address for this logical port assigned by the frame relay interface provider. An octet string of zero length if no address is used for this logical port. ifAdminStatus The desired administrative status of the frame relay logical port. Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 9] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 ifOperStatus The current operational status of the Frame Relay UNI or NNI logical port. ifLastChange The value of sysUptime at the last re-initialization of the logical port. The value of sysUpTime at the time the logical port entered its current operational state. If the current state was entered prior to the last re-initialization of the local network management subsystem, then this object contains a zero value. ifInOctets The number of received octets. This counter only counts octets from the beginning of the frame relay header field to the end of user data. ifInUcastPkts The number of received unerrored, unicast frames. ifInDiscards The number of received frames discarded. Specifically, frames discarded due to ingress buffer congestion and traffic policing. ifInErrors The number of received frames that are discarded because of an error. Specifically, frames that are too long or too short, frames that are not a multiple of 8 bits in length, frames with an invalid or unrecognized DLCI, frames with an abort sequence, frames with improper flag delimitation, and frame that fail FCS. ifInUnknownProtos The number of packets discarded because of an unknown or unsupported protocol. For Frame Relay Service interfaces, this counter will always be zero. ifOutOctets The number of transmitted octets. This counter only counts octets from the beginning of the frame relay header field to the end of user data. ifOutUcastpkts The number of unerrored, unicast frames sent. ifOutDiscards The number of frames discarded in the egress direction. Possible reasons are as follows: policing, congestion. Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 10] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 ifOutErrors The number of frames discarded in the egress direction because of an error. Specifically, frames that are aborted due to a transmitter underrun. ifName This variable is not applicable for Frame Relay Service interfaces, therefore, this variable contains a zero-length string. ifInMulticastPkts The number of received unerrored, multicast frames. ifInBroadcastPkts This variable is not applicable for Frame Relay Service interfaces, therefore, this counter is always zero. ifOutMulticastPkts The number of sent unerrored, multicast frames. ifOutBroadcastPkts This variable is not applicable for Frame Relay Service interfaces, therefore, this counter is always zero. ifHCInOctets Only used for DS3-based (and greater) Frame Relay logical ports. The number of received octets. This counter only counts octets from the beginning of the frame relay header field to the end of user data. ifHCOutOctets Only used for DS3-based (and greater) Frame Relay logical ports. The number of transmitted octets. This counter only counts octets from the beginning of the frame relay header field to the end of user data. ifLinkUpDownTrapEnable Set to true(1). It is recommended that the underlying physical layer notifications be disabled since both are not required. Notifications are enabled at the frame relay service layer specifically because PVC notifications are not to be sent if the frame relay interface fails. Without a linkUp/linkDown notification, the management station would receive no notification of the failure. Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 11] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 ifHighSpeed Set to the user data rate of the frame relay logical port in millions of bits per second. If the user data rate is less than 1 Mbps, then this value is zero. ifPromiscuousMode Set to false(2). ifConnectorPresent Set to false(2). Frame relay network service interfaces support the Interface Stack Group. Frame relay network service interfaces do not support any other groups or objects in the Interfaces group of the IF MIB. 2.5.3. Stack Table for DS1/E1 Environment This section describes by example how to use ifStackTable to represent the relationship of frame relay service to ds0 and ds0Bundles with ds1 interfaces [20]. Example: A frame relay service is being carried on 4 ds0s of a ds1. +---------------------+ | Frame Relay Service | +---------------------+ | +---------------------+ | ds0Bundle | +---------------------+ | | | | +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ |ds0| |ds0| |ds0| |ds0| +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ | | | | +---------------------+ | ds1 | +---------------------+ The assignment of the index values could for example be: ifIndex Description 1 FrameRelayService (type 44) 2 ds0Bundle (type 82) 3 ds0 #1 (type 81) 4 ds0 #2 (type 81) 5 ds0 #3 (type 81) 6 ds0 #4 (type 81) 7 ds1 (type 18) Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 12] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 The ifStackTable is then used to show the relationships between the various interfaces. ifStackTable Entries HigherLayer LowerLayer 0 1 1 2 2 3 2 4 2 5 2 6 3 7 4 7 5 7 6 7 7 0 In the case where the frame relay service is using a single ds0, then the ds0Bundle is not required. +---------------------+ | Frame Relay Service | +---------------------+ | +---+ |ds0| +---+ | +---------------------+ | ds1 | +---------------------+ The assignment of the index values could for example be: ifIndex Description 1 FrameRelayService (type 44) 2 ds0 (type 81) 3 ds1 (type 18) The ifStackTable is then used to show the relationships between the various interfaces. Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 13] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 ifStackTable Entries HigherLayer LowerLayer 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 0 2.5.4. Stack Table for V.35 Environments This section describes by example how to use ifStackTable to represent the relationship of frame relay service with V.35 interfaces. +---------------------+ | Frame Relay Service | +---------------------+ | +---------------------+ | v35 | +---------------------+ An example of index values in this case could be: ifIndex Description 1 FrameRelayService (type 44) 2 v35 (type 33) Note type 33 (RS232-like MIB) is used instead of type 45 (V.35). V35 does not pertain to this environment. The ifStackTable is then used to show the relationships between the various interfaces. ifStackTable Entries HigherLayer LowerLayer 0 1 1 2 2 0 2.5.5. The Frame Relay/ATM PVC Service Interworking MIB Connections between two frame relay endpoints are represented with an entry in the frPVCConnectTable of this MIB. Both endpoints are represented with rows in the frPVCEndptTable. The frPVCEndptConnectIdentifier object of each endpoint points to the frPVCConnectTable cross-connect table row for the connection. Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 14] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 In contrast, a connection that spans frame relay and ATM endpoints is represented with an entry in the frAtmIwfConnectionTable of the FR/ATM PVC Service Interworking MIB defined in [28]. In the case of an inter-worked connection, the frPVCEndptConnectIdentifier object is set to zero. Instead, the frPVCEndptAtmIwfConnIndex object is set to the index of the FR/ATM IWF cross-connect table row. The frame relay PVC cross-connect table (frPVCConnectTable) does not contain an entry for the FR/ATM inter-worked connection. 2.6. Textual Convention Change Version 1 of the Frame Relay Service MIB contains MIB objects defined with the DisplayString textual convention. In version 2 of this MIB, the syntax for these objects has been updated to use the (now preferred) SnmpAdminString textual convention. The new TC provides support for a greater variety of international character sets. The working group realizes that this change is not strictly supported by SMIv2. In our judgment, the alternative of deprecating the old objects and defining new objects would have a more adverse impact on backward compatibility and interoperability, given the particular semantics of these objects. 3. Object Definitions FRNETSERV-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN IMPORTS MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE, NOTIFICATION-TYPE, transmission, Counter32, Integer32 FROM SNMPv2-SMI TimeStamp, RowStatus FROM SNMPv2-TC MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP, NOTIFICATION-GROUP FROM SNMPv2-CONF InterfaceIndex, ifIndex FROM IF-MIB SnmpAdminString FROM SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB; frnetservMIB MODULE-IDENTITY LAST-UPDATED "200009280000Z" -- September 28, 2000 ORGANIZATION "IETF Frame Relay Service MIB Working Group" CONTACT-INFO "WG Charter: http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/frnetmib-charter WG-email: frnetmib@sunroof.eng.sun.com Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 15] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 Subscribe: frnetmib-request@sunroof.eng.sun.com Email Archive: ftp://ftp.ietf.org/ietf-mail-archive/frnetmib Chair: Andy Malis Vivace Networks, Inc. Email: Andy.Malis@vivacenetworks.com WG editor: Kenneth Rehbehn Megisto Systems, Inc. Email: krehbehn@megisto.com Co-author: David Fowler Syndesis Limited, EMail: fowler@syndesis.com" DESCRIPTION "The MIB module to describe generic objects for Frame Relay Network Service." -- -- Revision History -- REVISION "200009280000Z" DESCRIPTION "Published as RFC 2954. The major new features of this revision include: o Support for read-write capability to provision switch components providing service, o Support for cross-connection via a frame relay to ATM service interworking function, o Support for frame relay fragmentation, o Additional frame counters to track frame loss. Refer to Appendix A for a comprehensive list of changes since RFC 1604." REVISION "199311161200Z" DESCRIPTION "Published as RFC 1604." ::= { transmission 44 } Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 16] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 frnetservObjects OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { frnetservMIB 1 } frnetservTraps OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { frnetservMIB 2 } frnetservTrapsPrefix OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { frnetservTraps 0 } -- -- The Frame Relay Service Logical Port -- frLportTable OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF FrLportEntry MAX-ACCESS not-accessible STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The Frame Relay Logical Port Information table is an interface-specific addendum to the generic ifTable of the Interface MIB." ::= { frnetservObjects 1 } frLportEntry OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX FrLportEntry MAX-ACCESS not-accessible STATUS current DESCRIPTION "An entry in the Frame Relay Logical Port Information table." INDEX { ifIndex } ::= { frLportTable 1 } FrLportEntry ::= SEQUENCE { frLportNumPlan INTEGER, frLportContact SnmpAdminString, frLportLocation SnmpAdminString, frLportType INTEGER, frLportAddrDLCILen INTEGER, frLportVCSigProtocol INTEGER, frLportVCSigPointer OBJECT IDENTIFIER, frLportDLCIIndexValue Integer32, frLportTypeAdmin INTEGER, frLportVCSigProtocolAdmin INTEGER, frLportFragControl INTEGER, frLportFragSize Integer32 } Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 17] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 frLportNumPlan OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX INTEGER { other(1), e164(2), x121(3), none(4) } MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The value of this object identifies the network address numbering plan for this UNI/NNI logical port. The network address is the object ifPhysAddress. The value none(4) implies that there is no ifPhysAddress. The FRS agent will return an octet string of zero length for ifPhysAddress. The value other(1) means that an address has been assigned to this interface, but the numbering plan is not enumerated here." REFERENCE "E.164 [29] X.121 [30]" ::= { frLportEntry 1 } frLportContact OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX SnmpAdminString MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The value of this object identifies the network contact for this UNI/NNI logical port." ::= { frLportEntry 2 } frLportLocation OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX SnmpAdminString MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The value of this object identifies the frame relay network location for this UNI/NNI logical port." ::= { frLportEntry 3 } frLportType OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX INTEGER { uni(1), nni(2) } MAX-ACCESS read-only Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 18] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The value of this object identifies the type of network interface for this logical port." ::= { frLportEntry 4 } frLportAddrDLCILen OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX INTEGER { twoOctets10Bits(1), threeOctets10Bits(2), threeOctets16Bits(3), fourOctets17Bits(4), fourOctets23Bits(5) } UNITS "Octets" MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The value of this object identifies the Q.922 Address field length and DLCI length for this UNI/NNI logical port." REFERENCE "Q.922 [25]" ::= { frLportEntry 5 } frLportVCSigProtocol OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX INTEGER { none(1), lmi(2), ansiT1617D(3), ansiT1617B(4), ccittQ933A(5) } MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The value of this object identifies the Local In-Channel Signaling Protocol that is used for this frame relay UNI/NNI logical port. none(1): Interface does not use a PVC signaling protocol lmi(2): Interface operates the Stratacom/ Nortel/DEC Local Management Interface Specification protocol ansiT1617D(3): Interface operates the ANSI T1.617 Annex D PVC status protocol Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 19] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 ansiT1617B(4): Interface operates the ANSI T1.617 Annex B procedures ccittQ933A(5): Interface operates the ITU Q.933 Annex A PVC status protocol" REFERENCE "LMI [24] T1.617 Annex D [17], Q.933 Annex A [22]" ::= { frLportEntry 6 } frLportVCSigPointer OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS deprecated DESCRIPTION "The value of this object is used as a pointer to the table that contains the Local In-Channel Signaling Protocol parameters and errors for this UNI/NNI logical port. This object has been deprecated to reflect the fact that the local in-channel signaling parameters are accessed from a single table (frMgtVCSigTable) that includes parameters for all possible signaling protocols. Early design anticipated multiple tables, one for each signaling protocol." ::= { frLportEntry 7 } frLportDLCIIndexValue OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX Integer32 (16..4194303) MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS current DESCRIPTION "This object contains a hint to be used for frPVCEndptDLCIIndex when creating entries in the frPVCEndptTable. The SYNTAX of this object matches the SYNTAX of the frPVCEndptDLCIIndex - an object that is restricted to legal Q.922 DLCI values for the size of the address field. The value 0 indicates that no unassigned entries are available. To obtain the frPVCEndptDLCIIndex value for a new entry, the manager issues a management protocol retrieval operation to obtain the current value of Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 20] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 this object. After each retrieval, the agent must modify the value to the next unassigned index to prevent assignment of the same value to multiple management systems. A management system should repeat the read to obtain a new value should an attempt to create the new row using the previously returned hint fail." REFERENCE "Q.922 [25]" ::= { frLportEntry 8 } frLportTypeAdmin OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX INTEGER { uni(1), nni(2) } MAX-ACCESS read-write STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The value of this object desired identifies the type of network interface for this logical port." ::= { frLportEntry 9 } frLportVCSigProtocolAdmin OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX INTEGER { none(1), lmi(2), ansiT1617D(3), ansiT1617B(4), ccittQ933A(5) } MAX-ACCESS read-write STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The value of this object identifies the desired Local In-Channel Signaling Protocol that is used for this frame relay UNI/NNI logical port. This value must be made the active protocol as soon as possible on the device. Refer to frLportVCSigProtocol for a description of each signaling protocol choices." REFERENCE "LMI [24] T1.617 Annex D [17], Q.933 Annex A [22]" ::= { frLportEntry 10 } frLportFragControl OBJECT-TYPE Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 21] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 SYNTAX INTEGER { on(1), off(2) } MAX-ACCESS read-write STATUS current DESCRIPTION "This object controls the transmission and reception of fragmentation frames for this UNI or NNI interface. on(1) Frames are fragmented using the interface fragmentation format Note: The customer side of the interface must also be configured to fragment frames. off(2) Frames are not fragmented using the interface fragmentation format." REFERENCE "FRF.12 [21]" DEFVAL { off } ::= { frLportEntry 11 } frLportFragSize OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX Integer32 (0..4096) UNITS "Octets" MAX-ACCESS read-write STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The value of this object is the size in octets of the maximum size of each fragment to be sent when fragmenting. This object is only used by the fragmentation transmitter, and the two sides of the interface may differ. The fragment size includes the octets for the frame relay header, the UI octet, the NLPID, the fragmentation header, and the fragment payload. If frLportFragControl is set to off, this value should be zero." REFERENCE "FRF.12 [21]" DEFVAL { 0 } ::= { frLportEntry 12 } -- -- Frame Relay Management VC Signaling -- frMgtVCSigTable OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF FrMgtVCSigEntry Rehbehn & Fowler Standards Track [Page 22] RFC 2954 Frame Relay Service MIB October 2000 MAX-ACCESS not-accessible STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The Frame Relay Management VC Signaling Parameters and Errors table." ::= { frnetservObjects 2 } frMgtVCSigEntry OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX FrMgtVCSigEntry MAX-ACCESS not-accessible STATUS current DESCRIPTION "An entry in the Frame Relay Management VC Signaling Parameters Errors table." INDEX { ifIndex } ::= { frMgtVCSigTable 1 } FrMgtVCSigEntry ::= SEQUENCE { frMgtVCSigProced INTEGER, frMgtVCSigUserN391 INTEGER, frMgtVCSigUserN392 INTEGER, frMgtVCSigUserN393 INTEGER, frMgtVCSigUserT391 INTEGER, frMgtVCSigNetN392 INTEGER, frMgtVCSigNetN393 INTEGER, frMgtVCSigNetT392 INTEG