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Network Working Group                                            M. Rose
Request for Comments: 1187       Performance Systems International, Inc.
                                                           K. McCloghrie
                                                      Hughes LAN Systems
                                                                J. Davin
                                     MIT Laboratory for Computer Science
                                                            October 1990


                   Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP

1.  Status of this Memo

   This memo reports an interesting family of algorithms for bulk table
   retrieval using the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP).  This
   memo describes an Experimental Protocol for the Internet community,
   and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.  This memo
   does not specify a standard for the Internet community.  Please refer
   to the current edition of the "IAB Official Protocol Standards" for
   the standardization state and status of this protocol.  Distribution
   of this memo is unlimited.

Table of Contents

   1. Status of this Memo ..................................    1
   2. Abstract .............................................    1
   3. Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP ...................    2
   4. The Pipelined Algorithm ..............................    3
   4.1 The Maximum Number of Active Threads ................    4
   4.2 Retransmissions .....................................    4
   4.3 Some Definitions ....................................    4
   4.4 Top-Level ...........................................    5
   4.5 Wait for Events .....................................    6
   4.6 Finding the Median between two OIDs .................    8
   4.7 Experience with the Pipelined Algorithm .............   10
   4.8 Dynamic Range of Timeout Values .....................   10
   4.9 Incorrect Agent Implementations .....................   10
   5. The Parallel Algorithm ...............................   11
   5.1 Experience with the Parallel Algorithm ..............   11
   6. Acknowledgements .....................................   11
   7. References ...........................................   12
   Security Considerations..................................   12
   Authors' Addresses.......................................   12

2.  Abstract

   This memo reports an interesting family of algorithms for bulk table
   retrieval using the Simple Network Management Protocol (RFC 1157) [1].



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RFC 1187           Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP       October 1990


   The reader is expected to be familiar with both the Simple Network
   Management Protocol and SNMP's powerful get-next operator.  Please
   send comments to: Marshall T. Rose <mrose@psi.com>.

3.  Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP

   Empirical evidence has shown that SNMP's powerful get-next operator is
   effective for table traversal, particularly when the management
   station is interested in well-defined subsets of a particular table.
   There has been some concern that bulk table retrieval can not be
   efficiently accomplished using the powerful get-next operator.  Recent
   experience suggests otherwise.

   In the simplest case, using the powerful get-next operator, one can
   traverse an entire table by retrieving one object at a time.  For
   example, to traverse the entire ipRoutingTable, the management station
   starts with:

                  get-next (ipRouteDest)

   which might return

                  ipRouteDest.0.0.0.0

   The management station then continues invoking the powerful get-next
   operator, using the value provided by the previous response, e.g.,

                  get-next (ipRouteDest.0.0.0.0)

   As this sequence continues, each column of the ipRoutingTable can be
   retrieved, e.g.,

                  get-next (ipRouteDest.192.33.4.0)

   which might return

                  ipRouteIfIndex.0.0.0.0

   Eventually, a response is returned which is outside the table, e.g.,

                  get-next (ipRouteMask.192.33.4.0)

   which might return

                  ipNetToMediaIfIndex.192.33.4.1

   So, using this scheme, O(rows x columns) management operations are
   required to retrieve the entire table.



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RFC 1187           Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP       October 1990


   This approach is obviously sub-optimal as the powerful get-next
   operator can be given several operands.  Thus, the first step is to
   retrieve an entire row of the table with each operation, e.g.,

              get-next (ipRouteDest, ipRouteIfIndex, ..., ipRouteMask)

   which might return

                  ipRouteDest.0.0.0.0
                  ipRouteIfIndex.0.0.0.0
                  ipRouteMask.0.0.0.0

   The management station can then continue invoking the powerful get-
   next operator, using the results of the previous operation as the
   operands to the next operation.  Using this scheme O(rows) management
   operations are required to retrieve the entire table.

   Some have suggested that this is a weakness of the SNMP, in that
   O(rows) serial operations is time-expensive.  The problem with such
   arguments however is that implicit emphasis on the word "serial".  In
   fact, there is nothing to prevent a clever management station from
   invoking the powerful get-next operation several times, each with
   different operands, in order to achieve parallelism and pipelining in
   the network.  Note that this approach requires no changes in the
   SNMP, nor does it add any significant burden to the agent.

4.  The Pipelined Algorithm

   Let us now consider an algorithm for bulk table retrieval with the
   SNMP.  In the interests of brevity, the "pipelined algorithm" will
   retrieve only a single column from the table; without loss of
   generality, the pipelined algorithm can be easily extended to
   retrieve all columns.

   The algorithm operates by adopting a multi-threaded approach: each
   thread generates its own stream of get-next requests and processes
   the resulting stream of responses.  For a given thread, a request
   will correspond to a different row in the table.

   Overall retrieval efficiency is improved by being able to keep
   several transactions in transit, and by having the agent and
   management station process transactions simultaneously.

   The algorithm will adapt itself to varying network conditions and
   topologies as well as varying loads on the agent.  It does this both
   by varying the number of threads that are active (i.e., the number of
   transactions that are being processed and in transit) and by varying
   the retransmission timeout.  These parameters are varied based on the



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RFC 1187           Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP       October 1990


   transaction round-trip-time and on the loss/timeout of transactions.

4.1.  The Maximum Number of Active Threads

   One part of the pipelined algorithm which must be dynamic to get best
   results is the determination of how many threads to have active at a
   time.  With only one thread active, the pipelined algorithm
   degenerates to the serial algorithm mentioned earlier.  With more
   threads than necessary, there is a danger of overrunning the agent,
   whose only recourse is to drop requests, which is wasteful.  The
   ideal number is just enough to have the next request arrive at the
   agent, just as it finishes processing the previous request.  This
   obviously depends on the round-trip time, which not only varies
   dynamically depending on network topology and traffic-load, but can
   also be different for different tables in the same agent.

   With too few threads active, the round-trip time barely increases
   with each increase in the number of active threads; with too many,
   the round-trip time increases by the amount of time taken by the
   agent to process one request.  The number is dynamically estimated by
   calculating the round-trip-time divided by the number of active
   threads; whenever this value takes on a new minimum value, the limit
   on the number of threads is adjusted to be the number of threads
   active at the time the corresponding request was sent (plus one to
   allow for loss of requests).

4.2.  Retransmissions

   When there are no gateways between the manager and agent, the
   likelihood of in-order arrival of requests and responses is quite
   high.  At present, the decision to retransmit is based solely on the
   timeout.  One possible optimization is for the manager to remember
   the order in which requests are sent, and correlate this to incoming
   responses.  If one thread receives a response before another thread
   which sent an earlier request, then lossage could be assumed, and a
   retransmission made immediately.

4.3.  Some Definitions

   To begin, let us define a "thread" as some state information kept in
   the management station which corresponds to a portion of the table to
   be retrieved.  A thread has several bits of information associated
   with it:

      (1)  the range of SNMP request-ids which this thread can use,
           along with the last request-id used;

      (2)  last SNMP message sent, the number of times it has been



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RFC 1187           Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP       October 1990


           (re)sent, the time it was (re)sent;

      (3)  the inclusive lower-bound and exclusive upper-bound of
           the object-instance for the portion of the table that
           this thread will retrieve, along with the current
           object-instance being used;

      (4)  the number of threads which were active at the time it
           was last sent;

   When a thread is created, it automatically sends a get-next message
   using its inclusive lower-bound OID.  Further, it is placed at the
   end of the "thread queue".

   Let us also define an OID as a concrete representation of an object
   identifier which contains two parts:

      (1)  the number of sub-identifiers present, "nelem";

      (2)  the sub-identifiers themselves in an array, "elems",
           indexed from 1 up to (and including) "nelem".

4.4.  Top-Level

   The top-level consists of starting three threads, and then entering a
   loop.  As long as there are existing threads, the top-level waits for
   events (described next), and then acts upon the incoming messages.
   For each thread which received a response, a check is made to see if
   the OID of the response is greater than or equal to the exclusive
   upper-bound of the thread.  If so, the portion of the table
   corresponding to the thread has been completely retrieved, so the
   thread is destroyed.

   Otherwise, the variable bindings in the response are stored.
   Following this, if a new thread should be created, then the portion
   of the table corresponding to the thread is split accordingly.
   Regardless, another powerful get-next operator is issued on behalf of
   the thread.

   The initial starting positions (column, column.127, and column.192),
   were selected to form optimal partitions for tables which are indexed
   by IP addresses.  The algorithm could easily be modified to choose
   other partitions; however, it must be stressed that the current
   choices work for any tabular object.

      pipelined_algorithm (column)
      OID  column;
      {



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RFC 1187           Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP       October 1990


          timeout ::= some initial value;

          start new thread for [column, column.127);
          start new thread for [column.127, column.192);
          start new thread for [column.192, column+1);

          while (threads exist) {
             wait for events;
             foreach (thread that has an incoming message,
                      examined in order from the thread queue) {
                 OID     a;

                 if (message's OID >= thread's upper-bound) {
                     destroy thread;
                     continue;
                 }

                 store variable-bindings from message;

                 if (number of simultaneous threads does NOT
                             exceed a maximum number
                          && NOT backoff
                          && (a ::= oid_median (message's OID,
                                                thread's
                                                    upper-bound))) {
                      start new thread for [a, thread's upper-bound);
                      thread's upper-bound ::= a;
                      place thread at end of thread queue;
                      backoff ::= TRUE;
                  }
                  do another get-next for thread;
              }
          }
      }


4.5.  Wait for Events

   Waiting for events consists of waiting a small amount of time or
   until at least one message is received.

   Any messages encountered are then collated with the appropriate
   thread.  In addition, the largest round-trip time for
   request/responses is measured, and the maximum number of active
   threads is calculated.

   Next, the timeout is adjusted: if no responses were received, then
   the timeout is doubled; otherwise, a timeout-adjustment is calculated



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RFC 1187           Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP       October 1990


   as 1.5 times the largest observed round-trip time.  If the timeout-
   adjustment is greater than the current timeout, the current timeout
   is set to the timeout-adjustment.  Otherwise, the current timeout is
   averaged with the timeout-adjustment.

   Finally, if at least one thread did not receive a response, then the
   thread is identified which has waited the longest.  If the elapsed
   time (with noise factor) since the last request (or retransmission)
   is greater than the current timeout value, another retransmission is
   attempted.

   wait for events ()
   {
       backoff ::= TRUE, maxrtt ::= 0;
       find the thread which has been waiting the longest
           for a response;
       timedelta = timeout
                       - time since request was sent for thread;
       wait up to timedelta seconds or until some messages arrive;

       if (least one message arrived) {
           discard any messages which aren't responses;
           foreach (response which corresponds to a thread) {
               if (the response is a duplicate)
                   drop it and continue;

               if (this response is for a message that was
                       not retransmitted) {
                  if (the round-trip time is larger than maxrtt)
                       set maxrtt to the new round-trip time;
                   if (round-trip time / number of active threads
                         < minimum previous round-trip time / number
                              of active threads) {
                       set new minimum round-trip time per number of
                           active threads
                       set new maximum number of threads
                  }
                   backoff ::= FALSE;
               }
           }
       }
       if (backoff)
           double timeout;
       elsif (maxrtt > 0) {
          timeadjust ::= maxrtt * 3 / 2;
           if (timeadjust > timeout)
               timeout ::= timeadjust; backoff ::= TRUE;
           else



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RFC 1187           Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP       October 1990


               timeout ::= (timeout + timeadjust) / 2;
       }
       if (timeout exceeds some threshold)
          set timeout to that threshold;
      elsif (timeout is smaller than some threshold)
           set timeout to that threshold;

       if (at least one thread didn't receive a response) {
           find the thread which has been waiting the longest
               for a response,
               and determine the elapsed time since a message
               was sent;
           if (the elapsed time with noise is greater than timeout) {
               if (the number of retransmissions for this thread
                       exceeds a threshold)
                   abort the algorithm;
               retransmit the request;
               backoff ::= TRUE;
           }
       }
  }

4.6.  Finding the Median between two OIDs

   The object identifier space is neither uniform nor continuous.  As
   such, it is not always possible to choose an object identifier which
   is lexicographically-between two arbitrary object identifiers.  In
   view of this, the pipelined algorithm makes a best-effort attempt.

   Starting from the beginning, each sub-identifier of the two OIDs is
   scanned until a difference is encountered.  At this point there are
   several possible conditions:

      (1)  The upper OID has run out of sub-identifiers.  In this
           case, either the two OIDs are are identical or the lower
           OID is greater than the upper OID (an interface error),
           so no OID is returned.

      (2)  The lower OID has run out of sub-identifiers.  In this
           case, the first subsequent non-zero sub-identifier from
           the upper OID is located.  If no such sub-identifier is
           found, then no OID exists between the lower and upper
           OIDs, and no OID is returned.  Otherwise, a copy of the
           upper OID is made, but truncated at this non-zero
           sub-identifier, which is subsequently halved, and the
           resulting OID is returned.

      (3)  Otherwise, a copy of the lower OID is made, but truncated



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RFC 1187           Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP       October 1990


           at the point of difference.  This last sub-identifier is
           then set to the arithmetic mean of the difference.  In
           the case where the difference is only 1 (so the last
           sub-identifier remains the same) then a new sub-
           identifier is added, taking care to be larger than a
           possible sub-identifier present in the lower OID.
           Regardless, the resulting OID is returned.

       oid_median (lower, upper)
       OID     lower,
               upper;
       {
           for (i ::= 1; i < upper:nelem; i++) {
               if (i > lower:nelem) {
                   while (upper:elems[i] == 0)
                       if (++i > upper:nelem)
                           return NULL;
                   median ::= copy of upper;
                   median:nelem ::= i;
                   median:elems[i] ::= upper:elems[i] / 2;

                   return median;
              }

              if (lower:elems[i] == upper:elems[i])
                  continue;

               median ::= copy of lower;
               median:nelem ::= i;
               median:elems[i] ::= (lower:elems[i]+upper:elems[i])/2;
               if (median:elems[i] == lower:elems[i]) {
                   median:nelem ::= (i + 1);
                  if (lower:nelem < i)
                      median:elems[median:nelem] ::= 127;
                   elsif ((x ::= lower:elems[i + 1]) >= 16383)
                      median:elems[median:nelem] ::= x + 16383;
                   elsif (x >= 4095)
                      median:elems[median:nelem] ::= x + 4095;
                   elsif (x >= 1023)
                       median:elems[median:nelem] ::= x + 1023;
                   elsif (x >= 255)
                       median:elems[median:nelem] ::= x + 255;
                   else median:elems[median:nelem] ::=
                                                (x / 2) + 128;
               }

                return median;
           }



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RFC 1187           Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP       October 1990


           return NULL;
       }

4.7.  Experience with the Pipelined Algorithm

   This pipelined algorithm has been implemented and some
   experimentation has been performed.  It would be premature to provide
   extensive performance figures at this time, as the pipelined
   algorithm is still being tuned, and is implemented only in a
   prototype setting.  However, on tables of size O(2500), performance
   of 121 entries/second has been observed.  In contrast, the serial
   algorithm has performance of roughly 56 entries/second for the same
   table.

4.8.  Dynamic Range of Timeout Values

   It should be noted that the pipelined algorithm takes a simplistic
   approach with the timeout value: it does not maintain a history of
   the value and act accordingly.

   For example, if the timeout reaches the maximum timeout limit, and
   then latches for some period of time, this indicates a resource
   (either the network or the agent) is saturated.  Unfortunately, a
   solution is difficult: an elegant approach would be to combine two
   threads (but it is quite possible that no two consecutive threads
   exist when this determination is made).  Another approach might be to
   delay the transmission for threads which are ready to issue a new
   get-next operation.

   Similarly, if the timeout drops to the minimum value and subsequently
   latches, more threads should be started.

4.9.  Incorrect Agent Implementations

   An interesting result is that many agents do not properly implement
   the powerful get-next operator.  In particular, when a get-next
   request contains an operand with an arbitrarily-generated suffix,
   some agent implementations will handle this improperly, and
   ultimately return a result which is lexicographically less than the
   operand!

   A typical cause of this is when the instance-identifier for a
   columnar object is formed by a MAC or IP address, so each octet of
   the address forms a sub-identifier of the instance-identifier.  In
   such circumstances, the incorrect agent implementations compare
   against only the least significant octet of the sub-identifiers in
   the operand, instead of the full value of the sub-identifiers.




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RFC 1187           Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP       October 1990


   Upon encountering such an interaction, the pipelined algorithm
   implementation declares the thread dead (noting a possible gap in the
   table), and continues.

5.  The Parallel Algorithm

   One interesting optimization is to view the problem in two steps: in
   the first step, one column of the table is traversed to determine the
   full range of instances identifiers meaningful in the table.
   (Indeed, although as described above, the pipelined algorithm
   retrieves a single column, the prototype implementation can retrieve
   multiple columns).  In the second step, additional columns can be
   retrieved using the SNMP get operation, since the instance
   identifiers are already known.  Further, the manager can dynamically
   determine how many variables can be placed in a single SNMP get
   operation in order to minimize the number of requests.  Of course,
   since the agent's execution of the get operation is often less
   expensive than execution of the powerful get-next operation, when
   multiple columns are request, this two-step process requires less
   execution time on the agent.

   A second algorithm can be developed, the "parallel algorithm".  At
   present, each thread is mapped onto a single SNMP operation.  A
   powerful insight is to suggest mapping several threads onto a single
   SNMP operation: the manager must dynamically determine how many
   variables can be placed in a single powerful get-next operation.
   This has the advantage of reducing traffic, at the expense of
   requiring the agent to utilize more resources for each request.

   Earlier it was noted that the serial retrieval of objects could be
   viewed as a degenerate case of the pipelined algorithm, in which the
   number of active threads was one.  Similarly, the pipelined algorithm
   is a special case of the parallel algorithm, in which the number of
   threads per SNMP operation is one.

5.1.  Experience with the Parallel Algorithm

   The parallel algorithm has been implemented and some experimentation
   has been performed.  It would be premature to provide extensive
   performance figures at this time, as the algorithm is still being
   tuned, and is implemented only in a prototype setting.  However, on
   tables of size O(2500), performance of 320 entries/second has been
   observed, a performance improvement of 571% over the serial
   algorithm.

6.  Acknowledgements

   A lot of the ideas on pipelining are motivated by Van Jacobson's work



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RFC 1187           Bulk Table Retrieval with the SNMP       October 1990


   on adaptive timers in TCP.  The parallelization modifications were
   originally suggested by Jeffrey D. Case.

   Finally, the comments of the following individual is acknowledged:

      Frank Kastenholz, Racal-Interlan

7.  References

   [1] Case, J., Fedor, M., Schoffstall, M., and J. Davin, Simple
       Network Management Protocol (SNMP), RFC 1157, SNMP Research,
       Performance Systems International, Performance Systems
       International, MIT Laboratory for Computer Science, May 1990.

Security Considerations

   Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

Authors' Addresses

   Marshall T. Rose
   PSI, Inc.
   PSI California Office
   P.O. Box 391776
   Mountain View, CA 94039

   Phone: (415) 961-3380
   EMail: mrose@PSI.COM


   Keith McCloghrie
   Hughes LAN Systems
   1225 Charleston Road
   Mountain View, CA 94043

   Phone: (415) 966-7934
   EMail: KZM@HLS.COM


   James R. Davin
   MIT Laboratory for Computer Science, NE43-507
   545 Technology Square
   Cambridge, MA 02139

   Phone:  (617) 253-6020
   EMail:  jrd@ptt.lcs.mit.edu





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