Disman Working Group S. Chisholm
Internet Draft Nortel Networks
Document: draft-ietf-disman-alarm-mib-06.txt D. Romascanu
Category: Standards Track Avaya Inc
Expiration Date: September 2002 March 2002
Alarm MIB
Status of this Memo
This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance
with all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that
other groups may also distribute working documents as
Internet-Drafts.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six
months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other
documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-
Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as
"work in progress."
The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt
The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
Abstract
This memo defines a portion of the Management Information Base (MIB)
for use with network management protocols in the Internet community.
In particular, it describes management objects used for modelling
and storing alarms.
Table of Contents
1. The SNMP Management Framework
2. Introduction
3. Alarm Management Framework
3.1. Terminology
3.2. Features of this Architecture
3.3. Alarm Management Architecture
3.4. Relationship between Alarm and Notifications
3.5. Relation to Notification Log MIB
3.6. Relation to Event MIB
4. Generic Alarm MIB
4.1. Overview
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 1]
Alarm MIB March 2002
4.2. Definitions
5. ITU Alarm
5.1. Overview
5.2. IANA Considerations
5.3. Textual Conventions
5.4. Definitions
6. Examples
6.1. Alarms Based on linkUp/linkDown Notifications
6.2. Temperature Alarm using generic Notifications
6.3. Temperature Alarm without Notifications
6.4. Printer MIB Alarm Example
6.5. Rmon Alarm Example
6.6. The Lifetime of an Alarm
7. Security Considerations
8. Authors' Address
9. Acknowledgements
10. References
11. Full Copyright Statement
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 2]
Alarm MIB March 2002
1. The SNMP Management Framework
The SNMP Management Framework presently consists of five major
components:
o An overall architecture, described in RFC 2571 [RFC2571].
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 [RFC1155], STD 16, RFC 1212 [RFC1212] and RFC
1215 [RFC1215]. The second version, called SMIv2, is described
in STD 58, RFC 2578 [RFC2578], STD 58, RFC 2579 [RFC2579] and
STD 58, RFC 2580 [RFC2580].
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 [RFC1157]. A second version of
the SNMP message protocol, which is not an Internet standards
track protocol, is called SNMPv2c and described in RFC 1901
[RFC1901] and RFC 1906 [RFC1906]. The third version of the
message protocol is called SNMPv3 and described in RFC 1906
[RFC1906], RFC 2572 [RFC2572] and RFC 2574 [RFC2574].
o Protocol operations for accessing management information. The
first set of protocol operations and associated PDU formats is
described in STD 15, RFC 1157 [RFC1157]. A second set of
protocol operations and associated PDU formats is described in
RFC 1905 [RFC1905].
o A set of fundamental applications described in RFC 2573
[RFC2573] and the view-based access control mechanism described
in RFC 2575 [RFC2575].
A more detailed introduction to the current SNMP Management Framework
can be found in RFC 2570 [RFC2570].
Managed objects are accessed via a virtual information store, termed
the Management Information Base or MIB. Objects in the MIB are
defined using the mechanisms defined in the SMI.
This memo specifies a MIB module that is compliant to the SMIv2. A
MIB conforming to the SMIv1 can be produced through the appropriate
translations. The resulting translated MIB must be semantically
equivalent, except where objects or events are omitted because no
translation is possible (use of Counter64). Some machine readable
information in SMIv2 will be converted into textual descriptions in
SMIv1 during the translation process. However, this loss of machine
readable information is not considered to change the semantics of the
MIB.
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 3]
Alarm MIB March 2002
2. Introduction
In traditional SNMP management, problems are detected on an entity
either through polling interesting MIB variables, waiting for the
entity to send a notification for a problem, or some combination of
the two. This method is somewhat successful, but experience has
shown some problems with this approach. Managers monitoring large
number of entities cannot afford to be polling large numbers of
objects on each device. Managers trying to ensure high-reliability
are unable to accurately determine problems that may have occurred
when they were not monitoring an entity. Finally, it can be time
consuming for managers to try to understand the relationships
between the various objects they poll, the notifications they
receive and the problems occurring on the entity and even after
detailed analysis they may still be left with an incomplete picture
of what problems are occurring. But, it is important for an operator
to be able to determine current problems on a system, so they can be
fixed.
This memo describes a method of using alarm management in SNMP to
address these problems. It also provides the necessary MIB objects
to support these methods.
Alarms and other terms related to alarms management are defined in
the following sections.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119.
3. Alarm Management Framework
3.1 Terminology
Error
A deviation of a system from normal operation.
Fault
Lasting error or warning condition.
Event
Something that happens which may be of interest to a management
station. A fault, a change in status, crossing a threshold, or an
external input to the system, for example.
Notification
Unsolicited transmissions of management information.
Alarm
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 4]
Alarm MIB March 2002
Persistent indication of a fault.
Alarm State
A condition or stage in the existence of an alarm. As a minimum,
alarms states are raise and clear. They could also
include severity information such as defined by perceived severity
in the ITU model - cleared, indeterminate, critical, major, minor
and warning.
Alarm Raise
The initial detection of the fault indicated by an alarm or any
number of alarm states later entered, except clear. A Notification
SHOULD be sent on alarm raise.
Alarm Clear
The detection that the fault indicated by an alarm no longer
exists. A Notification SHOULD be sent on alarm clear.
Active Alarm
An alarm which has an alarm state that has been raised, but not
cleared.
Alarm Detection Point
The entity that detected the alarm.
Perceived Severity
The severity of the alarm as determined by the alarm detection
point using the information it has available.
3.2 Features of this Architecture
3.2.1 Modular Alarm Architecture
This memo describes a modular SNMP alarm management framework. The
framework defines a generic Alarm MIB that can be supported on its
own, or with additional alarm modelling information such as the
provided ITU Alarm MIB. This framework can also be expanded in the
future to support such features as alarm correlation and alarm
suppression. This modular architecture means that the cost of
supporting alarm management features is proportional to the number
of features an implementation supports.
3.2.2 Flexible Alarm Modeling
Alarm models document an understanding between a manager and an
agent as to what problems will be reported on a system, how these
problems will be reported, and what might possibly happen over the
lifetime of this problem.
The alarm modelling method provided in this memo provides
flexibility to support implementations with different modelling
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 5]
Alarm MIB March 2002
requirements. All alarms are modelled as a series of states that are
related together using an alarm ID.
Alarm states can be modelled using traditional notifications,
generic alarm notifications, or without notifications. Alarm states
modeled using traditional notifications would identify a
notification OID, and optionally an offset, value pair of one of the
notification varbinds to define the state. This alarm state would
be entered when the entity generated a notification that matched
this information and the alarm would be added to the active alarm
table. Alarm states modelled using generic notifications, use the
alarmActiveState or alarmClearState notifications defined in this
memo. These alarm states would be entered by some internal stimuli,
the alarm would be added to the active alarm table and these generic
notifications would then be sent. Alarm states modelled without any
notifications would be triggered by some internal stimuli, the alarm
would be added to the active alarm table, but no notifications would
be sent to interested managers.
3.2.3 Problem Indication
The Alarm MIB provides a means to tell both what notifications are
just informational events, as well as being able to tell exactly
what error or warning condition this alarm is indicating.
3.2.4 Alarm State Transition Notification
Managers interested in receiving a notification when an alarm
changes state can associate a notification with an alarm state
change. Those managers not interested in receiving notifications
would not associate a notification with an alarm state.
3.2.5 Identifying Resource under Alarm
An important goal of alarm management is to ensure that any detected
problems get fixed, so it is necessary to know exactly where this
problem is occurring. This goes beyond simply the box that is
experiencing the problem and includes physical resources like slots
and ports and logical resources like interfaces.
This MIB provides both a generic method for identifying a resource
and more alarm specific method, which uses notification varbinds.
3.2.6 Means of obtaining ITU alarm information
Alarm Information, as defined in ITU alarm models [M.3100], is
optionally available to implementations through the optional support
of the ITU-ALARM-MIB.
3.2.7 Configuration of Alarm Models
Alarm models can be added, updated or removed during runtime, assuming
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 6]
Alarm MIB March 2002
it is not being referenced by any active alarm instance.
3.2.8 Active Alarm Management
A list of currently active alarms on a system and supporting
statistics on the SNMP entity can be obtained.
This allows the network management station to find out about any
problems that may have occurred before it started managing a
particular network element, or while it was out of contact with it.
3.2.9 Distributed Alarm Management
All aspects of the Alarm MIB can be supported both on the device
experiencing the alarms and on any middle managers that might be
monitoring such devices.
3.2.10 Historical Alarm Management
Some systems may have a requirement that information on alarms that
are no longer active is available. There is a clear table to support
this.
This can also be achieved through the support of the notification
log MIB [RFC3014] to store alarm state transitions.
3.3 Alarm Management Architecture
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 7]
Alarm MIB March 2002
+------------------------------------------------+
| |
| +------------------------------------+ |
| | Notification Management | |
| +--------------+---------------------+ |
| | |
+------------------+-----------------------------+
|
V
|---------------
|
|
+------------------V-------------+ +----------------------------+
| | | | +------------------+ |
| +----------------->--> Alarm Modelling | |
| | | | | (descriptions) | |
| | | | +--------+---------+ |
| | | | | |
| | | | +--------V------------+ |
| | | | | Generic: Model- | |
| | | | | Active : Specific | |
| | | | | Alarms : Extensions | |
| | | | +---------------------+ |
| | | | | |
| |<----------------------------+ |
| | | +----------------------------+
| +---------------V----------+ |
| | RFC 2573 | |
| | SNMP-TARGET-MIB | |
| +--------+---------------+-+ |
| | | |
| +--------V-------------+ | |
| | RFC 3014 | | |
| | NOTIFICATION-LOG-MIB | | |
| +----------------------+ | |
| | |
| +------------------------V-+ |
| | RFC 2573 | |
| | SNMP-NOTIFICATION-MIB | |
| +----------+---------------+ |
| | |
+-------------|------------------
|
V
Informs & Traps
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 8]
Alarm MIB March 2002
3.4 Relationship between Alarm and Notifications
It is important to understand the relationship between alarms and
notifications, as both are traditional fault management methods.
This relationship is modeled using the alarmModelTable to define the
alarmModelNotificationId for each alarm state.
Not all notifications signal an alarm state transition. Some
notifications are simply informational in nature, such as those that
indicate that a configuration operation has been performed on an
entity. These sorts of notifications would not be represented in
the Alarm MIB.
The Alarm MIB allows the use of the notification space as defined in
[RFC2578] in order to identify the notifications that are related
with the specific alarm state transitions. However there is no
assumption that the respective notifications MUST be sent for all or
any of the alarm state transitions. It is also possible to model
alarms using no notifications at all. This architecture allows for
both the efficient exploitation of the body of defined notification
and for the use of non-notification based systems.
3.5 Relation to Notification Log MIB
The Alarm MIB is intended to complement the Notification Log
MIB[RFC3014], but can be used independently. The alarmActiveTable
is defined in manner similar to that of the nlmLogTable. This
format allows for the storage of any NOTIFICATION that can be
defined using SMI. Using the same format as the notification log
MIB also simplifies operations for systems choosing to implement
both MIBs.
The object alarmActiveLogPointer points, for each entry in the
alarmActiveLogTable, to the log index in the notification log MIB,
if used.
If the notification log MIB is supported, it can be monitored by a
management system as a hedge against lost alarms. The notification
log can also be used to support historical alarm management.
3.6 Relationship with the Event MIB
During the work and discussions in the Working Group, the issue of
the relationship between the MIB modules and the Event MIB [RFC2981]
was raised. There is no direct relation or dependency between the
Alarm MIB and the Event MIB. Some common terms (like 'event') are
being used in both MIB modules, and the user is directed to the
sections that define terminology in the two documents for
clarification.
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 9]
Alarm MIB March 2002
4. Generic Alarm MIB
4.1 Overview
The ALARM-MIB consists of alarm models and lists of active and
cleared alarms.
The alarmModelTable contains information that is applicable to all
instances of an alarm. It can be populated at start-up with all
alarms that could happen on a system or later configured by a
management application. It contains all the alarms for a given
system. If a notification is not represented in the
alarmModelTable, it is not an alarm state transition. The
alarmModelTable provides a means of defining the raise/clear and
other state transition relationship between alarm states.
alarmModelIndex acts as a unique identifier for an alarm. An alarm
model consists of defining the possible states an alarm can assume
as well as the OID of the notification that is sent out when an
alarm changes state. The object alarmModelState defines the states
of an alarm.
The alarmActiveTable contains a list of alarms that are currently
occurring on a system. It is intended that this table be queried
upon device discovery and rediscovery to determine which alarms are
currently active on the device.
The alarmActiveVariableTable contains the notification variable
bindings associated with the alarms in the alarmActiveTable.
The alarmActiveStatsTable contains current and total raised alarm
counts as well as the time of the last alarm raise and alarm clears
per named alarm list.
The alarmClearTable contains recently cleared alarms. It contains up
to alarmClearMaximum cleared alarms.
The MIB also defines generic alarm notifications that can be used in
the event that there is not an existing applicable notification to
signal the alarm state transition - alarmActiveState and
alarmClearState.
4.1.1 Extensible
The relationship between the Alarm MIB and the other alarm model MIB
modules is expressed by the following: The alarmModelTable has a
corresponding table in the specific MIB For each row in the specific
MIB alarm model table there is one row in the alarmModelTable. The
alarmActiveTable has a corresponding table in the specific MIBs. For
each row in the specific MIB active alarm table, there is one row in
the alarmActiveTable. The alarmModelSpecificPointer object in the
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 10]
Alarm MIB March 2002
alarmModelTable points to the specific model corresponding to an
alarm type. The alarmActiveSpecificPointer object in the
alarmActiveTable points to the model specific active alarm table.
4.1.2 Problem Indication
The problem that each alarm indicates is identified through the OID
of the notificationId of the state transition, and, optionally, the
ITU parameters. alarmModelDescription provides a description of the
alarm state suitable for displaying to an operator.
4.1.3 Alarm State Transition Notification
Alarms are modelled by defining all possible states in the
alarmModelTable, as well as defining alarmModelNotificationId,
alarmModelVarbindIndex, and alarmModelVarbindValue for each of the
possible alarm states. Optionally, ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity models
the states in terms of ITU perceived severity.
Alarm state transitions can use existing notifications or can use
the generic notifications and alarmActiveState and alarmClearState.
If the implementation chooses not to alert the management station,
then a value of 0.0 can be used for alarmModelNotificationId.
Alternatively, a notification can be defined in
alarmModeNotifiationId and no hosts specified in the SNMP-TARGET-MIB
[RFC2573].
4.1.4 Identifying Resource under Alarm
Resources under alarm can be identified using the
alarmActiveResourceId. This RowPointer object points to an
appropriate object to identify the given resource, depending on the
type of the resource. If the resource is an interface, then the
alarmActiveResourceId will be an instance of ifIndex. If the
resource is a physical entity, then the alarmActiveResourceId will
be an instance of entPhysicalIndex. If the resource is an
application, then the alarmActiveResourceId will be an instance of
sysApplRunIndex. Other resources will be identified using an
appropriate MIB object instance.
In addition to this, the variable bindings from the notifications
that signal the alarm state transitions are stored in the active
alarm table. This allows for other forms of resource identification.
4.1.5 Configurable Alarm Models
The alarm model table can, and probably should, be initially
populated by the system. The objects in alarmModelTable and
ituAlarmTable have a MAX-ACCESS of read-write, which allows the
manager to modify the alarm models to suit their requirements.
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 11]
Alarm MIB March 2002
4.1.6 Active Alarm Management
Lists of alarms currently occurring on an SNMP entity are stored in
the alarmActiveTable and, optionally a model specific alarmTable,
e.g. the ituAlarmActiveTable.
4.1.7 Distributed Alarm Management
Distributed alarm management can be achieved by support of the Alarm
MIB on both the alarm detection point and on the mid-level manager.
This is facilitated by the ability to be able to store different
named alarm lists. A middle manager could therefore, create an
alarmListName for each of the devices it managed and therefore store
separate lists for each device. In additional, the context and IP
addresses of the alarm detection point are stored in the
alarmActiveTable.
4.2 Definitions
ALARM-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN
IMPORTS
MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE, NOTIFICATION-TYPE,
Integer32, Unsigned32,
TimeTicks, Counter32, Counter64,
IpAddress, Opaque, mib-2 FROM SNMPv2-SMI
DateAndTime,
RowStatus, RowPointer,
TEXTUAL-CONVENTION FROM SNMPv2-TC
SnmpAdminString, SnmpEngineID FROM SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB
InetAddressType, InetAddress FROM INET-ADDRESS-MIB
MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP,
NOTIFICATION-GROUP FROM SNMPv2-CONF;
alarmMIB MODULE-IDENTITY
LAST-UPDATED "200203250000Z"
ORGANIZATION "IETF Distributed Management Working Group"
CONTACT-INFO
" Sharon Chisholm
Nortel Networks
PO Box 3511 Station C
Ottawa, Ont. K1Y 4H7
Canada
schishol@nortelnetworks.com
Dan Romascanu
Avaya Inc.
Atidim Technology Park, Bldg. #3
Tel Aviv, 61131
Israel
Tel: +972-3-645-8414
Email: dromasca@avaya.com"
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 12]
Alarm MIB March 2002
DESCRIPTION
"The MIB module describes a generic solution
to model alarms and to store the current list
of active alarms."
REVISION "200203250000Z"
DESCRIPTION
"Initial version, published as RFC XXXX."
::= { mib-2 XX }
alarmObjects OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { alarmMIB 1 }
alarmNotifications OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { alarmMIB 0 }
alarmModel OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { alarmObjects 1 }
alarmActive OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { alarmObjects 2 }
alarmClear OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { alarmObjects 3 }
-- Textual Conventions
ResourceId ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A unique identifier for this resource.
The type of the resource can be determined by looking
at the OID that describes the resource.
Resources must be identified in a consistent manner.
For example, if this resource is an interface, this
object MUST point to an ifIndex."
SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER
-- Alarm Model
alarmModelLastChanged OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX TimeTicks
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value of sysUpTime at the time of the last
creation, deletion or modification of an entry in
the alarmModelTable.
If the number and content of entries has been unchanged
since the last re-initialization of the local network
management subsystem, then the value of this object
MUST be zero."
::= { alarmModel 1 }
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 13]
Alarm MIB March 2002
alarmModelTable OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF AlarmModelEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A table of information about possible alarms on the system,
and how they have been modelled."
::= { alarmModel 2 }
alarmModelEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX AlarmModelEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Entries appear in this table for each possible alarm state."
INDEX { alarmListName, alarmModelIndex, alarmModelState }
::= { alarmModelTable 1 }
AlarmModelEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
alarmModelIndex Unsigned32,
alarmModelState Unsigned32,
alarmModelNotificationId OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
alarmModelVarbindIndex Integer32,
alarmModelVarbindValue Integer32,
alarmModelDescription SnmpAdminString,
alarmModelSpecificPointer RowPointer,
alarmModelRowStatus RowStatus
}
alarmModelIndex OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"An integer that acts as an alarm Id
to uniquely identify each alarm
within the named alarm list. "
::= { alarmModelEntry 1 }
alarmModelState OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A value of 1 MUST indicate a clear alarm state.
The value of this object MUST be less than the
alarmModelState of more severe alarm states for
this alarm. The value of this object MUST be more
than the alarmModelState of less severe alarm states
for this alarm."
::= { alarmModelEntry 2 }
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 14]
Alarm MIB March 2002
alarmModelNotificationId OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The NOTIFICATION-TYPE object identifier of this alarm
state transition. If there is no notification associated
with this alarm state, the value of this object MUST be
'0.0'"
::= { alarmModelEntry 3 }
alarmModelVarbindIndex OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Integer32
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The index into the varbind listing of the notification
indicated by alarmModelNotificationId which helps
signal that the given alarm has changed state.
If there is no applicable varbind, the value of this
object MUST be zero.
For SNMPv1 traps, a 1 indicates the first varbind. For
NOTIFICATION-TYPE, a 1 indicates the first real varbind
after the required varbinds of sysUptime and SNMPTrapOID."
::= { alarmModelEntry 4 }
alarmModelVarbindValue OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Integer32
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value that the varbind indicated by
alarmModelVarbindIndex takes to indicate
that the alarm has entered this state."
::= { alarmModelEntry 5 }
alarmModelDescription OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SnmpAdminString
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A brief description of this alarm and state suitable to
display to operators."
::= { alarmModelEntry 6 }
alarmModelSpecificPointer OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX RowPointer
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 15]
Alarm MIB March 2002
"If no additional, model-specific Alarm MIB is supported by the
system the value of this object is `0.0'. When a model-specific
Alarm MIB is supported, this object is the instance pointer to
the model-specific alarm definition."
::= { alarmModelEntry 7 }
alarmModelRowStatus OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX RowStatus
MAX-ACCESS read-create
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Control for creating and deleting entries. Entries may be
modified while active. Alarms whose alarmModelRowStatus is
not active will not appear in either the alarmActiveTable
or the alarmClearTable. Setting this object to notInService
cannot be used as an alarm suppression mechanism. Entries
that are notInService will disappear as described in RFC2579
This row can not be modified or deleted while it is being
referenced by a value of alarmActiveModelPointer. In these
cases, an error of `inconsistentValue' will be returned to
the manager."
::= { alarmModelEntry 8 }
-- Active Alarm Table --
alarmActiveLastChanged OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX TimeTicks
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value of sysUpTime at the time of the last
creation or deletion of an entry in the alarmActiveTable.
If the number of entries has been unchanged since the
last re-initialization of the local network management
subsystem, then this object contains a zero value."
::= { alarmActive 1 }
alarmActiveTable OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF AlarmActiveEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A table of Active Alarms entries."
::= { alarmActive 2 }
alarmActiveEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX AlarmActiveEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 16]
Alarm MIB March 2002
DESCRIPTION
"Entries appear in this table when alarms are raised. They
are removed when the alarm is cleared."
INDEX { alarmListName, alarmActiveDateAndTime,
alarmActiveIndex }
::= { alarmActiveTable 1 }
AlarmActiveEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
alarmListName SnmpAdminString,
alarmActiveDateAndTime DateAndTime,
alarmActiveIndex Unsigned32,
alarmActiveEngineID SnmpEngineID,
alarmActiveEngineAddressType InetAddressType,
alarmActiveEngineAddress InetAddress,
alarmActiveContextName SnmpAdminString,
alarmActiveVariables Unsigned32,
alarmActiveNotificationID OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
alarmActiveResourceId ResourceId,
alarmActiveDescription SnmpAdminString,
alarmActiveLogPointer RowPointer,
alarmActiveModelPointer RowPointer,
alarmActiveSpecificPointer RowPointer }
alarmListName OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SnmpAdminString (SIZE(0..32))
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The name of the list of alarms. This SHOULD be the same as
nlmLogName if the Notification Log MIB [RFC3014] is supported.
An implementation may allow multiple named alarm lists, up to
some implementation-specific limit (which may be none). A
zero-length list name is reserved for creation and deletion
by the managed system, and MUST be used as the default log
name by systems that do not support named alarm lists."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 1 }
alarmActiveDateAndTime OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX DateAndTime
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The local date and time when the alarm occurred.
Implementations MUST include the offset from UTC,
if available. Implementation in environments in which
the UTC offset is not available is NOT RECOMMENDED."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 2 }
alarmActiveIndex OBJECT-TYPE
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 17]
Alarm MIB March 2002
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A monotonically increasing integer which acts as the
index of entries within the named alarm list. It wraps
back to 1 after it reaches its maximum value."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 3 }
alarmActiveEngineID OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SnmpEngineID
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The identification of the SNMP engine at which the alarm
originated.
If the alarm list can contain alarms from only one
engine or the alarm is from an SNMPv1 system, this object is
a zero length string."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 4 }
alarmActiveEngineAddressType OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX InetAddressType
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This object indicates what type of address is stored in
the alarmActiveEngineAddress object - IPv4, IPv6, DNS, etc."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 5 }
alarmActiveEngineAddress OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX InetAddress
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The IP Address of the SNMP engine on which the alarm is
occurring. This is used to identify the source of an SNMPv1
trap, since an alarmActiveEngineId cannot be extracted from the
SNMPv1 trap PDU.
This object MUST always be instantiated, even if the list
can contain alarms from only one engine."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 6 }
alarmActiveContextName OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SnmpAdminString
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The name of the SNMP MIB context from which the alarm came.
For SNMPv1 alarms this is the community string from the Trap.
If the alarm's source SNMP engine is known not to support
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 18]
Alarm MIB March 2002
multiple contexts, this object is a zero length string."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 7 }
alarmActiveVariables OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The number of variables in alarmActiveVariableTable for this
alarm. Also, the number of varbinds for the notification
associated with this alarm state."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 8 }
alarmActiveNotificationID OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The NOTIFICATION-TYPE object identifier of the alarm
state transition that is occurring."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 9 }
alarmActiveResourceId OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX ResourceId
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This object identifies the resource under alarm.
If there is no corresponding resource, then
the value of this object MUST be 0.0."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 10 }
alarmActiveDescription OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SnmpAdminString
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This object provides a textual description of the
active alarm. This text is generated dynamically by the
notification generator to provide useful information
to the human operator. This information SHOULD
provide information allowing the operator to locate
the resource for which this alarm is being generated.
This information is not intended for consumption by
automated tools."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 11 }
alarmActiveLogPointer OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX RowPointer
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 19]
Alarm MIB March 2002
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A pointer to the corresponding row in a
notification logging MIB where the state change
notification for this active alarm is logged.
If no log entry applies to this active alarm,
then this object MUST have the value of 0.0"
::= { alarmActiveEntry 12 }
alarmActiveModelPointer OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX RowPointer
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A pointer to the corresponding row in the
alarmModelTable for this active alarm. This
points not only to the alarm modelling being
instantiated, but also to the specific alarm
state that is active."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 13 }
alarmActiveSpecificPointer OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX RowPointer
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"If no additional, model-specific, Alarm MIB is supported by the
system this object is `0.0'. When a model-specific Alarm MIB is
supported, this object is the instance pointer to the specific
model-specific active alarm list."
::= { alarmActiveEntry 14 }
-- Active Alarm Variable Table --
alarmActiveVariableTable OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF AlarmActiveVariableEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A table of variables to go with active alarm entries."
::= { alarmActive 3 }
alarmActiveVariableEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX AlarmActiveVariableEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Entries appear in this table when there are variables in
the varbind list of a corresponding alarm in
alarmActiveTable."
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 20]
Alarm MIB March 2002
INDEX { alarmListName, alarmActiveIndex,
alarmActiveVariableIndex }
::= { alarmActiveVariableTable 1 }
AlarmActiveVariableEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
alarmActiveVariableIndex Unsigned32,
alarmActiveVariableID OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
alarmActiveVariableValueType INTEGER,
alarmActiveVariableCounter32Val Counter32,
alarmActiveVariableUnsigned32Val Unsigned32,
alarmActiveVariableTimeTicksVal TimeTicks,
alarmActiveVariableInteger32Val Integer32,
alarmActiveVariableOctetStringVal OCTET STRING,
alarmActiveVariableIpAddressVal IpAddress,
alarmActiveVariableOidVal OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
alarmActiveVariableCounter64Val Counter64,
alarmActiveVariableOpaqueVal Opaque }
alarmActiveVariableIndex OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A monotonically increasing integer, starting at 1 for a
given alarmActiveIndex, for indexing variables within the
active alarm list."
::= { alarmActiveVariableEntry 1 }
alarmActiveVariableID OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The alarm variable's object identifier."
::= { alarmActiveVariableEntry 2 }
alarmActiveVariableValueType OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX INTEGER {
counter32(1),
unsigned32(2),
timeTicks(3),
integer32(4),
ipAddress(5),
octetString(6),
objectId(7),
counter64(8),
opaque(9)
}
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The type of the value. One and only one of the value
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 21]
Alarm MIB March 2002
objects that follow is used, based on this type."
::= { alarmActiveVariableEntry 3 }
alarmActiveVariableCounter32Val OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when alarmActiveVariableType is 'counter32'."
::= { alarmActiveVariableEntry 4 }
alarmActiveVariableUnsigned32Val OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when alarmActiveVariableType is 'unsigned32'."
::= { alarmActiveVariableEntry 5 }
alarmActiveVariableTimeTicksVal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX TimeTicks
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when alarmActiveVariableType is 'timeTicks'."
::= { alarmActiveVariableEntry 6 }
alarmActiveVariableInteger32Val OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Integer32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when alarmActiveVariableType is 'integer32'."
::= { alarmActiveVariableEntry 7 }
alarmActiveVariableOctetStringVal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX OCTET STRING
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when alarmActiveVariableType is 'octetString'."
::= { alarmActiveVariableEntry 8 }
alarmActiveVariableIpAddressVal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX IpAddress
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when alarmActiveVariableType is 'ipAddress'."
::= { alarmActiveVariableEntry 9 }
alarmActiveVariableOidVal OBJECT-TYPE
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 22]
Alarm MIB March 2002
SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when alarmActiveVariableType is 'objectId'."
::= { alarmActiveVariableEntry 10 }
alarmActiveVariableCounter64Val OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter64
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when alarmActiveVariableType is 'counter64'."
::= { alarmActiveVariableEntry 11 }
alarmActiveVariableOpaqueVal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Opaque
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value when alarmActiveVariableType is 'opaque'."
::= { alarmActiveVariableEntry 12 }
-- Statistics --
alarmActiveStatsTable OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF AlarmActiveStatsEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This table represents the alarm statistics
information."
::= { alarmActive 4 }
alarmActiveStatsEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX AlarmActiveStatsEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Statistics on the current active alarms."
INDEX { alarmListName }
::= { alarmActiveStatsTable 1 }
AlarmActiveStatsEntry ::=
SEQUENCE {
alarmActiveStatsCurrentActive Unsigned32,
alarmActiveStatsTotalActive Unsigned32,
alarmActiveStatsLastRaise TimeTicks,
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 23]
Alarm MIB March 2002
alarmActiveStatsLastClear TimeTicks
}
alarmActiveStatsCurrentActive OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The total number of currently active alarms on the system."
::= { alarmActiveStatsEntry 1 }
alarmActiveStatsTotalActive OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The total number of active alarms since system restarted."
::= { alarmActiveStatsEntry 2 }
alarmActiveStatsLastRaise OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX TimeTicks
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value of sysUpTime at the time of the last
alarm raise for this alarm list.
If no alarm raises have occurred since the
last re-initialization of the local network management
subsystem, then this object contains a zero value."
::= { alarmActiveStatsEntry 3 }
alarmActiveStatsLastClear OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX TimeTicks
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value of sysUpTime at the time of the last
alarm clear for this alarm list.
If no alarm clears have occurred since the
last re-initialization of the local network management
subsystem, then this object contains a zero value."
::= { alarmActiveStatsEntry 4 }
-- Alarm Clear
alarmClearMaximum OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Integer32
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 24]
Alarm MIB March 2002
DESCRIPTION
"This object specifies the maximum number of cleared
alarms to store in the alarmClearTable. When this
number is reaches, the cleared alarms with the
earliest clear time will be removed from the table."
::= { alarmClear 1 }
alarmClearTable OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF AlarmClearEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This table contains information on
cleared alarms."
::= { alarmClear 2 }
alarmClearEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX AlarmClearEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Information on a cleared alarm."
INDEX { alarmListName, alarmClearDateAndTime,
alarmClearIndex }
::= { alarmClearTable 1 }
AlarmClearEntry ::=
SEQUENCE {
alarmClearIndex Unsigned32,
alarmClearDateAndTime DateAndTime,
alarmClearEngineID SnmpEngineID,
alarmClearEngineAddressType InetAddressType,
alarmClearEngineAddress InetAddress,
alarmClearContextName SnmpAdminString,
alarmClearNotificationID OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
alarmClearResourceId ResourceId,
alarmClearLogIndex Unsigned32,
alarmClearModelPointer RowPointer
}
alarmClearIndex OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A monotonically increasing integer which acts as the
index of entries within the named alarm list. It wraps
back to 1 after it reaches its maximum value.
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 25]
Alarm MIB March 2002
This object has the same value as the alarmActiveIndex that
this alarm instance had when it was active."
::= { alarmClearEntry 1 }
alarmClearDateAndTime OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX DateAndTime
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The local date and time when the alarm cleared.
Implementations MUST include the offset from UTC,
if available. Implementation in environments in which
the UTC offset is not available is NOT RECOMMENDED."
::= { alarmClearEntry 2 }
alarmClearEngineID OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SnmpEngineID
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The identification of the SNMP engine at which the alarm
originated.
If the alarm list can contain Notifications from only one
engine or the trap is from an SNMPv1 system, this object is
a zero length string."
::= { alarmClearEntry 3 }
alarmClearEngineAddressType OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX InetAddressType
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This object indicates what type of address is stored in
the alarmActiveEngineAddress object - IPv4, IPv6, DNS, etc."
::= { alarmClearEntry 4 }
alarmClearEngineAddress OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX InetAddress
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The IP Address of the SNMP engine on which the alarm was
occurring. This is used to identify the source of an SNMPv1
trap, since an alarmActiveEngineId cannot be extracted from the
SNMPv1 trap PDU.
This object MUST always be instantiated, even if the list
can contain alarms from only one engine."
::= { alarmClearEntry 5 }
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 26]
Alarm MIB March 2002
alarmClearContextName OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SnmpAdminString
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The name of the SNMP MIB context from which the alarm came.
For SNMPv1 traps this is the community string from the Trap.
If the alarm's source SNMP engine is known not to support
multiple contexts, this object is a zero length string."
::= { alarmClearEntry 6 }
alarmClearNotificationID OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX OBJECT IDENTIFIER
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The NOTIFICATION-TYPE object identifier of the alarm
clear."
::= { alarmClearEntry 7 }
alarmClearResourceId OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX ResourceId
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This object identifies the resource that was under alarm.
If there is no corresponding resource, then
the value of this object MUST be 0.0."
::= { alarmClearEntry 8 }
alarmClearLogIndex OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (0..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This number MUST be the same as the log index of the
applicable row in the notification log MIB, if it exists.
If no log index applies to the trap, then this object
MUST have the value of 0."
::= { alarmClearEntry 9 }
alarmClearModelPointer OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX RowPointer
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A pointer to the corresponding row in the
alarmModelTable for this cleared alarm."
::= { alarmClearEntry 10 }
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 27]
Alarm MIB March 2002
-- Notifications
alarmNotificationObjects OBJECT IDENTIFIER
::= { alarmNotifications 1 }
alarmModelIndexVarbind OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS accessible-for-notify
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This object has the same value as alarmModelIndex
for a specific alarm model,
but can be varbound into a notification."
::= { alarmNotificationObjects 1 }
alarmModelStateVarbind OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
MAX-ACCESS accessible-for-notify
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This object has the same value as alarmModelState
for a specific alarm model,
but can be varbound into a notification."
::= { alarmNotificationObjects 2 }
alarmActiveState NOTIFICATION-TYPE
OBJECTS { alarmModelIndexVarbind,
alarmModelStateVarbind,
alarmActiveResourceId }
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"An instance of the alarm indicated by
alarmModelIndexVarbind has been raised
against the entity indicated by
alarmActiveResourceType and alarmACtiveResourceId."
::= { alarmNotifications 2 }
alarmClearState NOTIFICATION-TYPE
OBJECTS { alarmModelIndexVarbind,
alarmActiveResourceId }
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"An instance of the alarm indicated by
alarmModelIndexVarbind has been cleared against
the entity indicated by alarmActiveResourceType
and alarmACtiveResourceId."
::= { alarmNotifications 3 }
-- Conformance
alarmConformance OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { alarmMIB 2 }
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 28]
Alarm MIB March 2002
alarmCompliances OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { alarmConformance 1 }
alarmCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The compliance statement for systems supporting
the Alarm MIB."
MODULE -- this module
MANDATORY-GROUPS {
alarmActiveGroup,
alarmModelGroup
}
::= { alarmCompliances 1 }
alarmGroups OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { alarmConformance 2 }
alarmModelGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
alarmModelLastChanged,
alarmModelNotificationId,
alarmModelVarbindIndex,
alarmModelVarbindValue,
alarmModelDescription,
alarmModelSpecificPointer,
alarmModelRowStatus
}
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Alarm model group."
::= { alarmGroups 1}
alarmActiveGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
alarmActiveLastChanged,
alarmActiveEngineID,
alarmActiveEngineAddressType,
alarmActiveEngineAddress,
alarmActiveContextName,
alarmActiveVariables,
alarmActiveNotificationID,
alarmActiveResourceId,
alarmActiveDescription,
alarmActiveLogPointer,
alarmActiveModelPointer,
alarmActiveSpecificPointer,
alarmActiveVariableID,
alarmActiveVariableValueType,
alarmActiveVariableCounter32Val,
alarmActiveVariableUnsigned32Val,
alarmActiveVariableTimeTicksVal,
alarmActiveVariableInteger32Val,
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 29]
Alarm MIB March 2002
alarmActiveVariableOctetStringVal,
alarmActiveVariableIpAddressVal,
alarmActiveVariableOidVal,
alarmActiveVariableCounter64Val,
alarmActiveVariableOpaqueVal
}
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Active Alarm list group."
::= { alarmGroups 2}
alarmActiveStatsGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
alarmActiveStatsTotalActive,
alarmActiveStatsCurrentActive,
alarmActiveStatsLastRaise,
alarmActiveStatsLastClear
}
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
" Active alarm summary group."
::= { alarmGroups 3}
alarmClearGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
alarmClearMaximum,
alarmClearEngineID,
alarmClearEngineAddressType,
alarmClearEngineAddress,
alarmClearContextName,
alarmClearNotificationID,
alarmClearResourceId,
alarmClearLogIndex,
alarmClearModelPointer
}
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
" Cleared alarm group."
::= { alarmGroups 4}
alarmNotificationVarbindGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
alarmModelIndexVarbind,
alarmModelStateVarbind
}
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The collection of accessible-for-notify objects
that are used for the notifications defined in
the alarmNotificationsGroup."
::= { alarmGroups 5 }
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 30]
Alarm MIB March 2002
alarmNotificationsGroup NOTIFICATION-GROUP
NOTIFICATIONS { alarmActiveState, alarmClearState }
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The collection of notifications that can be used to
model alarms for faults lacking pre-existing
notification definitions."
::= { alarmGroups 6 }
END
5. ITU Alarm
5.1 Overview
This MIB module defines alarm information specific to the alarm
model defined in ITU M.3100 [M.3100], X.733[X.733] and X.736[X.736].
This MIB module follows the modular architecture defined by the
Alarm MIB, in which the generic Alarm MIB can be augmented by other
alarm information defined according to more specific models that
define additional behaviour and characteristics.
The ituAlarmTable contains information from the ITU Alarm Model
about possible alarms in the system.
The ituAlarmActiveTable contains information from the ITU Alarm
Model about alarms that are currently occurring on the system.
The ituAlarmActiveStatsTable provides statistics on current and
total alarms.
5.2 IANA Considerations
Values of IANAItuProbableCause less than 255 can only be given out
if they correspond to ITU numbers and are agreed to by the disman
working group. Values of IANAItuProbableCause greater than 255 can
be given out when agreed to by the disman working group.
Values of IANAItuEventType can be given out when agreed to by the
disman working group.
The following shall be used as the initial values, but the latest
values for these textual conventions should be obtained from IANA:
IANA-ITU-ALARM-TC DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN
IMPORTS
MODULE-IDENTITY, mib-2 FROM SNMPv2-SMI
TEXTUAL-CONVENTION FROM SNMPv2-TC;
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 31]
Alarm MIB March 2002
ianaItuAlarmNumbers MODULE-IDENTITY
LAST-UPDATED "200202040000Z"
ORGANIZATION "IANA"
CONTACT-INFO
"Postal: Internet Assigned Numbers Authority
Internet Corporation for Assigned Names
and Numbers
4676 Admiralty Way, Suite 330
Marina del Rey, CA 90292-6601
USA
Tel: +1 310-823-9358
E-Mail: iana@iana.org"
DESCRIPTION
"The MIB module defines the ITU Alarm
textual convention for objects expected to require
regular extension."
::= { mib-2 xx }
IANAItuProbableCause ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"ITU probable cause values for the alarms as per M.3100,
X.733 and X.736."
SYNTAX INTEGER
{
aIS (1),
callSetUpFailure (2),
degradedSignal (3),
farEndReceiverFailure (4),
framingError (5),
lossOfFrame (6),
lossOfPointer (7),
lossOfSignal (8),
payloadTypeMismatch (9),
transmissionError (10),
remoteAlarmInterface (11),
excessiveBER (12),
pathTraceMismatch (13),
unavailable (14),
signalLabelMismatch (15),
lossOfMultiFrame (16),
receiveFailure (17),
transmitFailure (18),
modulationFailure (19),
demodulationFailure (20),
broadcastChannelFailure (21),
connectionEstablishmentError (22),
invalidMessageReceived (23),
localNodeTransmissionError (24),
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 32]
Alarm MIB March 2002
remoteNodeTransmissionError (25),
routingFailure (26),
--Values 27-50 are reserved for communications alarm related
--probable causes
-- The following are used with equipment alarm.
backplaneFailure (51),
dataSetProblem (52),
equipmentIdentifierDuplication (53),
externalIFDeviceProblem (54),
lineCardProblem (55),
multiplexerProblem (56),
nEIdentifierDuplication (57),
powerProblem (58),
processorProblem (59),
protectionPathFailure (60),
receiverFailure (61),
replaceableUnitMissing (62),
replaceableUnitTypeMismatch (63),
synchronizationSourceMismatch (64),
terminalProblem (65),
timingProblem (66),
transmitterFailure (67),
trunkCardProblem (68),
replaceableUnitProblem (69),
realTimeClockFailure (70),
--An equipment alarm to be issued if the system detects that the
--real time clock has failed
antennaFailure (71),
batteryChargingFailure (72),
diskFailure (73),
frequencyHoppingFailure (74),
iODeviceError (75),
lossOfSynchronisation (76),
lossOfRedundancy (77),
powerSupplyFailure (78),
signalQualityEvaluationFailure (79),
tranceiverFailure (80),
protectionMechanismFailure (81),
protectingResourceFailure (82),
-- Values 83-100 are reserved for equipment alarm related probable
-- causes
-- The following are used with environmental alarm.
airCompressorFailure (101),
airConditioningFailure (102),
airDryerFailure (103),
batteryDischarging (104),
batteryFailure (105),
commercialPowerFailure (106),
coolingFanFailure (107),
engineFailure (108),
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 33]
Alarm MIB March 2002
fireDetectorFailure (109),
fuseFailure (110),
generatorFailure (111),
lowBatteryThreshold (112),
pumpFailure (113),
rectifierFailure (114),
rectifierHighVoltage (115),
rectifierLowFVoltage (116),
ventilationsSystemFailure (117),
enclosureDoorOpen (118),
explosiveGas (119),
fire (120),
flood (121),
highHumidity (122),
highTemperature (123),
highWind (124),
iceBuildUp (125),
intrusionDetection (126),
lowFuel (127),
lowHumidity (128),
lowCablePressure (129),
lowTemperatue (130),
lowWater (131),
smoke (132),
toxicGas (133),
coolingSystemFailure (134),
externalEquipmentFailure (135),
externalPointFailure (136),
-- Values 137-150 are reserved for environmental alarm related
-- probable causes
-- The following are used with Processing error alarm.
storageCapacityProblem (151),
memoryMismatch (152),
corruptData (153),
outOfCPUCycles (154),
sfwrEnvironmentProblem (155),
sfwrDownloadFailure (156),
lossOfRealTimel (157),
--A processing error alarm to be issued after the system has
--reinitialised. This will indicate
--to the management systems that the view they have of the managed
--system may no longer
--be valid. Usage example: The managed
--system issues this alarm after a reinitialization with severity
--warning to inform the
--management system about the event. No clearing notification will
--be sent.
applicationSubsystemFailure (159),
configurationOrCustomisationError (160),
databaseInconsistency (161),
fileError (162),
outOfMemory (163),
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 34]
Alarm MIB March 2002
softwareError (164),
timeoutExpired (165),
underlayingResourceUnavailable (166),
versionMismatch (167),
--Values 168-200 are reserved for processing error alarm related
-- probable causes.
bandwidthReduced (201),
congestion (202),
excessiveErrorRate (203),
excessiveResponseTime (204),
excessiveRetransmissionRate (205),
reducedLoggingCapability (206),
systemResourcesOverload (207 ),
other (255),
adapterError (256),
callEstablishmentError (257),
communicationsProtocolError (258),
communicationsSubsystemFailure (259),
configurationOrCustomizationError (260),
cpuCyclesLimitExceeded (261),
dataSetOrModemError (262),
dteDceInterfaceError (263),
equipmentMalfunction (264),
excessiveVibration (265),
fireDetected (266),
floodDetected (267),
heatingVentCoolingSystemProblem (268),
humidityUnacceptable (269),
inputOutputDeviceError (270),
inputDeviceError (271),
lanError (272),
leakDetected (273),
materialSupplyExhausted (274),
ouputDeviceError (275),
performanceDegraded (276),
pressureUnacceptable (277),
queueSizeExceeded (278),
resourceAtOrNearingCapacity (279),
responseTimeExecessive (280),
retransmissionRateExcessive (281),
softwareProgramAbnormallyTerminated (282),
softwareProgramError (283),
temperatureUnacceptable (284),
thresholdCrossed (285),
toxicLeakDetected (286),
underlyingResourceUnavailable (287),
authenticationFailure (288),
breachOfConfidentiality (289),
cableTamper (290),
delayedInformation (291),
denialOfService (292),
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 35]
Alarm MIB March 2002
duplicateInformation (293),
informationMissing (294),
informationModificationDetected (295),
informationOutOfSequence (296),
keyExpired (297),
nonRepudiationFailure (298),
outOfHoursActivity (299),
outOfService (300),
proceduralError (301),
unauthorizedAccessAttempt (302),
unexpectedInformation (303)
}
IANAItuEventType ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The ITU event Type values as per M.3100"
SYNTAX INTEGER
{
other (1),
communicationsAlarm (2),
qualityOfServiceAlarm (3),
processingErrorAlarm (4),
equipmentAlarm (5),
environmentalAlarm (6),
integrityViolation (7),
operationalViolation (8),
physicalViolation (9),
securityServiceOrMechanismViolation (10),
timeDomainViolation (11)
}
END
5.3 Textual Conventions
ITU-ALARM-TC DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN
IMPORTS
MODULE-IDENTITY, mib-2 FROM SNMPv2-SMI
TEXTUAL-CONVENTION FROM SNMPv2-TC;
alarmItuTc MODULE-IDENTITY
LAST-UPDATED "200202040000Z"
ORGANIZATION "IETF Distributed Management Working Group"
CONTACT-INFO
" Sharon Chisholm
Nortel Networks
PO Box 3511 Station C
Ottawa, Ont. K1Y 4H7
Canada
schishol@nortelnetworks.com
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 36]
Alarm MIB March 2002
Dan Romascanu
Avaya Inc.
Atidim Technology Park, Bldg. #3
Tel Aviv, 61131
Israel
Tel: +972-3-645-8414
Email: dromasca@avaya.com"
DESCRIPTION
"The MIB module defines the ITU Alarm
textual convention for objects not expected to require
regular extension."
REVISION "200202040000Z"
DESCRIPTION
"Initial version, published as RFC XXXX."
::= { mib-2 xx }
ItuPerceivedSeverity ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"ITU perceived severity values as per M.3100
and X.733"
SYNTAX INTEGER {
cleared (1),
indeterminate (2),
critical (3),
major (4),
minor (5),
warning (6)
}
ItuTrendIndication ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"ITU trend indication values for alarms
as per [M.3100] and [X.733]."
SYNTAX INTEGER
{
moreSevere (1),
noChange (2),
lessSevere (3)
}
END
5.4 Definitions
ITU-ALARM-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN
IMPORTS
MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE,
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 37]
Alarm MIB March 2002
Counter32, Gauge32, mib-2 FROM SNMPv2-SMI
DisplayString, AutonomousType,
RowPointer FROM SNMPv2-TC
alarmListName, alarmModelIndex,
alarmActiveDateAndTime, alarmActiveIndex
FROM ALARM-MIB
ItuPerceivedSeverity,
ItuTrendIndication FROM ITU-ALARM-TC
IANAItuProbableCause,
IANAItuEventType FROM IANA-ITU-ALARM-TC
MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP FROM SNMPv2-CONF;
ituAlarmMIB MODULE-IDENTITY
LAST-UPDATED "200202040000Z"
ORGANIZATION "IETF Distributed Management Working Group"
CONTACT-INFO
" Sharon Chisholm
Nortel Networks
PO Box 3511 Station C
Ottawa, Ont. K1Y 4H7
Canada
schishol@nortelnetworks.com
Dan Romascanu
Avaya Inc.
Atidim Technology Park, Bldg. #3
Tel Aviv, 61131
Israel
Tel: +972-3-645-8414
Email: dromasca@avaya.com"
DESCRIPTION
"The MIB module describes ITU Alarm information
as defined in ITU Recommendation M.3100 [M.3100],
X.733 [X.733] and X.736 [X.736]."
REVISION "200202040000Z"
DESCRIPTION
"Initial version, published as RFC XXXX."
::= { mib-2 xx }
ituAlarmObjects OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ituAlarmMIB 1 }
ituAlarmModel OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ituAlarmObjects 1 }
ituAlarmActive OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ituAlarmObjects 2 }
ituAlarmTable OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF ItuAlarmEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 38]
Alarm MIB March 2002
"A table of ITU Alarm information for possible alarms
on the system."
::= { ituAlarmModel 1 }
ituAlarmEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX ItuAlarmEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Entries appear in this table for each possible alarm
severity."
INDEX { alarmListName, alarmModelIndex,
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity }
::= { ituAlarmTable 1 }
ItuAlarmEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity ItuPerceivedSeverity,
ituAlarmEventType IANAItuEventType,
ituAlarmProbableCause IANAItuProbableCause,
ituAlarmAdditionalText DisplayString,
ituAlarmGenericModel RowPointer }
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX ItuPerceivedSeverity
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
" ITU perceived severity values as per [M.3100] and
[X.733]."
::= { ituAlarmEntry 1 }
ituAlarmEventType OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX IANAItuEventType
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
" Represents the event type values for the alarms as per
[M.3100], [X.733] and [X.736]"
::= { ituAlarmEntry 2 }
ituAlarmProbableCause OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX IANAItuProbableCause
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
" ITU probable cause values as per [M.3100],
[X.733] and [X.736]."
::= { ituAlarmEntry 3 }
ituAlarmAdditionalText OBJECT-TYPE
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 39]
Alarm MIB March 2002
SYNTAX DisplayString
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
" Represents the additional text field for the alarm
as per [M.3100] and [X.733]."
::= { ituAlarmEntry 4}
ituAlarmGenericModel OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX RowPointer
MAX-ACCESS read-write
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This object points to the corresponding
row in the alarmModelTable for this alarm severity."
::= { ituAlarmEntry 5 }
-- ITU Active Alarm Table --
ituAlarmActiveTable OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF ItuAlarmActiveEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A table of ITU information for active alarms entries."
::= { ituAlarmActive 1 }
ituAlarmActiveEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX ItuAlarmActiveEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Entries appear in this table when alarms are active. They
are removed when the alarm is no longer occurring."
INDEX { alarmListName, alarmActiveDateAndTime,
alarmActiveIndex }
::= { ituAlarmActiveTable 1 }
ItuAlarmActiveEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
ituAlarmActiveTrendIndication ItuTrendIndication,
ituAlarmActiveDetector AutonomousType,
ituAlarmActiveServiceProvider AutonomousType,
ituAlarmActiveServiceUser AutonomousType
}
ituAlarmActiveTrendIndication OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX ItuTrendIndication
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
" Represents the trend indication values for the alarms
as per [M.3100] and [X.733]."
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 40]
Alarm MIB March 2002
::= { ituAlarmActiveEntry 1 }
ituAlarmActiveDetector OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX AutonomousType
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Represents the SecurityAlarmDetector object from [X.736]."
::= { ituAlarmActiveEntry 2 }
ituAlarmActiveServiceProvider OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX AutonomousType
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Represents the ServiceProvider object from [X.736]."
::= { ituAlarmActiveEntry 3 }
ituAlarmActiveServiceUser OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX AutonomousType
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Represents the SericeUser object from [X.736]."
::= { ituAlarmActiveEntry 4 }
-- Statistics and Counters
ituAlarmActiveStatsTable OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF ItuAlarmActiveStatsEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This table represents the ITU alarm statistics
information."
::= { ituAlarmActive 2 }
ituAlarmActiveStatsEntry OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX ItuAlarmActiveStatsEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Statistics on the current active ITU alarms."
INDEX { alarmListName }
::= { ituAlarmActiveStatsTable 1 }
ItuAlarmActiveStatsEntry ::=
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 41]
Alarm MIB March 2002
SEQUENCE {
ituAlarmActiveStatsIndeterminateCurrent Gauge32,
ituAlarmActiveStatsCriticalCurrent Gauge32,
ituAlarmActiveStatsMajorCurrent Gauge32,
ituAlarmActiveStatsMinorCurrent Gauge32,
ituAlarmActiveStatsWarningCurrent Gauge32,
ituAlarmActiveStatsIndeterminateTotal Counter32,
ituAlarmActiveStatsCriticalTotal Counter32,
ituAlarmActiveStatsMajorTotal Counter32,
ituAlarmActiveStatsMinorTotal Counter32,
ituAlarmActiveStatsWarningTotal Counter32
}
ituAlarmActiveStatsIndeterminateCurrent OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Gauge32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A count of the current number of active alarms with a
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity of indeterminate."
::= { ituAlarmActiveStatsEntry 1 }
ituAlarmActiveStatsCriticalCurrent OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Gauge32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A count of the current number of active alarms with a
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity of critical."
::= { ituAlarmActiveStatsEntry 2 }
ituAlarmActiveStatsMajorCurrent OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Gauge32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A count of the current number of active alarms with a
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity of major."
::= { ituAlarmActiveStatsEntry 3 }
ituAlarmActiveStatsMinorCurrent OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Gauge32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A count of the current number of active alarms with a
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity of minor."
::= { ituAlarmActiveStatsEntry 4 }
ituAlarmActiveStatsWarningCurrent OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Gauge32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 42]
Alarm MIB March 2002
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A count of the current number of active alarms with a
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity of warning."
::= { ituAlarmActiveStatsEntry 5 }
ituAlarmActiveStatsIndeterminateTotal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A count of the total number of active alarms with a
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity of indeterminate since system
restart."
::= { ituAlarmActiveStatsEntry 6 }
ituAlarmActiveStatsCriticalTotal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A count of the total number of active alarms with a
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity of critical since system restart."
::= { ituAlarmActiveStatsEntry 7 }
ituAlarmActiveStatsMajorTotal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A count of the total number of active alarms with a
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity of major since system restart."
::= { ituAlarmActiveStatsEntry 8 }
ituAlarmActiveStatsMinorTotal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A count of the total number of active alarms with a
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity of minor since system restart."
::= { ituAlarmActiveStatsEntry 9 }
ituAlarmActiveStatsWarningTotal OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A count of the total number of active alarms with a
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity of warning since system restart."
::= { ituAlarmActiveStatsEntry 10 }
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 43]
Alarm MIB March 2002
-- Conformance
ituAlarmConformance OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ituAlarmMIB 2 }
ituAlarmCompliances OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ituAlarmConformance 1 }
ituAlarmCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The compliance statement for systems supporting
the ITU Alarm MIB."
MODULE -- this module
MANDATORY-GROUPS {
ituAlarmGroup
}
::= { ituAlarmCompliances 1 }
ituAlarmGroups OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ituAlarmConformance 2 }
ituAlarmGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
ituAlarmEventType,
ituAlarmProbableCause,
ituAlarmGenericModel
}
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"ITU alarm details list group."
::= { ituAlarmGroups 1}
ituAlarmServiceUserGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
ituAlarmAdditionalText,
ituAlarmActiveTrendIndication
}
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The use of these parameters is a service-user option."
::= { ituAlarmGroups 2 }
ituAlarmSecurityGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
ituAlarmActiveDetector,
ituAlarmActiveServiceProvider,
ituAlarmActiveServiceUser
}
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Security Alarm Reporting Function as defined in [X.736]"
::= { ituAlarmGroups 3 }
ituAlarmStatisticsGroup OBJECT-GROUP
OBJECTS {
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 44]
Alarm MIB March 2002
ituAlarmActiveStatsIndeterminateCurrent,
ituAlarmActiveStatsCriticalCurrent,
ituAlarmActiveStatsMajorCurrent,
ituAlarmActiveStatsMinorCurrent,
ituAlarmActiveStatsWarningCurrent,
ituAlarmActiveStatsIndeterminateTotal,
ituAlarmActiveStatsCriticalTotal,
ituAlarmActiveStatsMajorTotal,
ituAlarmActiveStatsMinorTotal,
ituAlarmActiveStatsWarningTotal
}
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"ITU Active Alarm Statistics."
::= { ituAlarmGroups 4 }
END
6. Examples
6.1 Alarms Based on linkUp/linkDown Notifications
This example demonstrates an interface-based alarm that goes into a
state of "warning" when a linkDown notification occurs but the
ifAdminStatus indicates the interface was taken down
administratively. If IfAdminStatus is "up" when the linkDown
notification occurs, then there is a problem, so the state of the
alarm is critical. A linkUp alarm clears the alarm.
linkDown NOTIFICATION-TYPE
OBJECTS { ifIndex, ifAdminStatus, ifOperStatus }
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
""
::= { snmpTraps 3 }
linkUp NOTIFICATION-TYPE
OBJECTS { ifIndex, ifAdminStatus, ifOperStatus }
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
""
::= { snmpTraps 4 }
alarmModelIndex 3
alarmModelState 1
alarmModelNotificationId linkUp
alarmModelVarbindIndex 0
alarmModelVarbindValue 0
alarmModelDescription "linkUp"
alarmModelSpecificPointer ituAlarmEntry.3.1
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 45]
Alarm MIB March 2002
ituAlarmEventType communicationsAlarm (2)
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity cleared (1)
ituAlarmGenericModel alarmModelEntry.3.1
alarmModelIndex 3
alarmModelState 2
alarmModelNotificationId linkDown
alarmModelVarbindIndex 2
alarmModelVarbindValue down (2)
alarmModelDescription "linkDown administratively"
alarmModelSpecificPointer ituAlarmEntry.3.6
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
ituAlarmEventType communicationsAlarm (2)
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity warning (6)
ituAlarmGenericModel alarmModelEntry.3.2
alarmModelIndex 3
alarmModelState 3
alarmModelNotificationId linkDown
alarmModelVarbindIndex 2
alarmModelVarbindValue up (1)
alarmModelDescription "linkDown - confirmed problem"
alarmModelSpecificPointer ituAlarmEntry.3.3
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
ituAlarmEventType communicationsAlarm (2)
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity critical (3)
ituAlarmGenericModel alarmModelEntry.3.3
alarmActiveIndex 1
alarmActiveTime 2342464573
alarmActiveDateAndTime DateAndTime,
alarmActiveEngineID SnmpEngineID,
alarmActiveEngineAddressType ipV4
alarmActiveEngineAddress 10.10.10.10
alarmActiveContextName SnmpAdminString,
alarmActiveVariables 3
alarmActiveNotificationID 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.3
alarmActiveLogPointer 0.0
alarmActiveModelPointer alarmModelEntry.3
alarmActiveSpecificPointer ituAlarmActiveEntry.1.3
ituAlarmActiveTrendIndication moreSevere (1)
ituAlarmActiveProbableCause cableTamper ( )
ituAlarmActiveAdditionalText ""
ituAlarmDetector 0.0
ituAlarmServiceProvider 0.0
ituAlarmServiceUser 0.0
alarmActiveVariableIndex 1
alarmActiveVariableID ifIndex
alarmActiveVariableValueType integer32(4)
alarmActiveVariableCounter32Val 0
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 46]
Alarm MIB March 2002
alarmActiveVariableUnsigned32Val 0
alarmActiveVariableTimeTicksVal 0
alarmActiveVariableInteger32Val 346
alarmActiveVariableOctetStringVal ""
alarmActiveVariableIpAddressVal 0
alarmActiveVariableOidVal 0.0
alarmActiveVariableCounter64Val 0
alarmActiveVariableIndex 2
alarmActiveVariableID ifAdminStatus
alarmActiveVariableValueType integer32(4)
alarmActiveVariableCounter32Val 0
alarmActiveVariableUnsigned32Val 0
alarmActiveVariableTimeTicksVal 0
alarmActiveVariableInteger32Val up (1)
alarmActiveVariableOctetStringVal ""
alarmActiveVariableIpAddressVal 0
alarmActiveVariableOidVal 0.0
alarmActiveVariableCounter64Val 0
alarmActiveVariableIndex 3
alarmActiveVariableID ifOperStatus
alarmActiveVariableValueType integer32(4)
alarmActiveVariableCounter32Val 0
alarmActiveVariableUnsigned32Val 0
alarmActiveVariableTimeTicksVal 0
alarmActiveVariableInteger32Val down(2)
alarmActiveVariableOctetStringVal ""
alarmActiveVariableIpAddressVal 0
alarmActiveVariableOidVal 0.0
alarmActiveVariableCounter64Val 0
alarmActiveVariableOpaqueVal
6.2 Temperature Alarms Using Generic Notifications
Consider a system able to detect four different temperature
states for a widget - normal, minor, major, critical. The
system does not have any notification definitions for these
alarm states. A temperature alarm can be modelled using the
generic alarm notifications of alarmClearState and alarmActive.
alarmModelIndex 5
alarmModelState 1
alarmModelNotificationId alarmClearState
alarmModelVarbindIndex 2
alarmModelVarbindValue cleared (1)
alarmModelDescription "Acme Widget Temperature Normal"
alarmModelSpecificPointer ituAlarmEntry.5.1
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
ituAlarmEventType environmentalAlarm (6)
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 47]
Alarm MIB March 2002
ituPerceivedSeverity cleared (1)
ituAlarmGenericModel alarmModelEntry.5.1
alarmModelIndex 5
alarmModelState 2
alarmModelNotificationId alarmActiveState
alarmModelVarbindIndex 2
alarmModelVarbindValue minor (5)
alarmModelDescription "Acme Widget Temperature Minor"
alarmModelSpecificPointer ituAlarmEntry.5.5
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
ituAlarmEventState environmentalAlarm (6)
ituPerceivedSeverity minor (5)
ituAlarmGenericModel alarmModelEntry.5.2
alarmModelIndex 5
alarmModelState 3
alarmModelNotificationId alarmActiveState
alarmModelVarbindIndex 2
alarmModelVarbindValue major (4)
alarmModelDescription "Acme Widget Temperature Major"
alarmModelSpecificPointer ituAlarmEntry.5.4
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
ituAlarmEventType environmentalAlarm (6)
ituPerceivedSeverity major (4)
ituAlarmGenericModel alarmModelEntry.5.3
alarmModelIndex 5
alarmModelState 4
alarmModelNotificationId alarmActiveState
alarmModelVarbindIndex 2
alarmModelVarbindValue critical (3)
alarmModelDescription "Acme Widget Temperature Critical"
alarmModelSpecificPointer ituAlarmEntry.5.3
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
ituAlarmEventType environmentalAlarm (6)
ituPerceivedSeverity critical (3)
ituAlarmGenericModel alarmModelEntry.5.4
6.3 Temperature Alarms Without Notifications
Consider a system able to detect four different temperature
states for a widget - normal, minor, major, critical. The
system does not have any notification definitions for these
alarm states. A temperature alarm can be modelled without
specifying any notifications in the alarm model. When a
temperature state other than normal is detected, an instance
of this alarm would be added to the active alarm table, but
no notifications would be sent out.
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 48]
Alarm MIB March 2002
This could alternatively be accomplished using the models from
example 6.2 and by not specifying any target managers in the
SNMP-TARGET-MIB, which would allow the alarm state
notifications to be logged in the notification log while
still preventing notifications from being transmitted
on the wire.
alarmModelIndex 6
alarmModelState 1
alarmModelNotificationId 0.0
alarmModelVarbindIndex 0
alarmModelVarbindValue 0
alarmModelDescription "Widget Temperature"
alarmModelSpecificPointer ituAlarmEntry.6.1
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
ituAlarmEventType environmentalAlarm (6)
ituPerceivedSeverity cleared (1)
ituAlarmGenericModel alarmModelEntry.6.1
alarmModelIndex 6
alarmModelState 2
alarmModelNotificationId 0.0
alarmModelVarbindIndex 0
alarmModelVarbindValue 0
alarmModelDescription "Widget Temperature"
alarmModelSpecificPointer ituAlarmEntry.6.5
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
ituAlarmEventState environmentalAlarm (6)
ituAlarmPerceivedSeverity minor (5)
ituAlarmGenericModel alarmModelEntry.6.2
alarmModelIndex 6
alarmModelState 3
alarmModelNotificationId 0.0
alarmModelVarbindIndex 0
alarmModelVarbindValue 0
alarmModelDescription "Widget Temperature"
alarmModelSpecificPointer ituAlarmEntry.6.4
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
ituAlarmEventType environmentalAlarm (6)
ituPerceivedSeverity major (4)
ituAlarmGenericModel alarmModelEntry.6.3
alarmModelIndex 6
alarmModelState 4
alarmModelNotificationId 0.0
alarmModelVarbindIndex 0
alarmModelVarbindValue 0
alarmModelDescription "Widget Temperature Severe"
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 49]
Alarm MIB March 2002
alarmModelSpecificPointer ituAlarmEntry.6.3
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
ituAlarmEventType environmentalAlarm (6)
ituPerceivedSeverity critical (3)
ituAlarmGenericModel alarmModelEntry.6.4
6.4 Printer MIB Alarm Example
Consider the following notifications defined in the
printer MIB [RFC1759]:
prtAlertSeverityLevel OBJECT-TYPE
-- This value is a type 1 enumeration
SYNTAX INTEGER {
other(1),
critical(3),
warning(4)
}
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The level of severity of this alert table entry. The printer
determines the severity level assigned to each entry into the
table."
::= { prtAlertEntry 2 }
printerV2Alert NOTIFICATION-TYPE
OBJECTS { prtAlertIndex, prtAlertSeverityLevel, prtAlertGroup,
prtAlertGroupIndex, prtAlertLocation, prtAlertCode }
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"This trap is sent whenever a critical event is added to the
prtAlertTable."
::= { printerV2AlertPrefix 1 }
These notifications can be used to model a printer alarm as
follows:
alarmModelIndex 9
alarmModelState 1
alarmModelNotificationId alarmClearState
alarmModelVarbindIndex 0
alarmModelVarbindValue 0
alarmModelDescription "Printer Alarm"
alarmModelSpecificPointer 0.0
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
alarmModelIndex 9
alarmModelState 2
alarmModelNotificationId printerV2Alert
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 50]
Alarm MIB March 2002
alarmModelVarbindIndex 2
alarmModelVarbindValue warning (4)
alarmModelDescription "Printer Alarm"
alarmModelSpecificPointer 0.0
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
alarmModelIndex 9
alarmModelState 3
alarmModelNotificationId printerV2Alert
alarmModelVarbindIndex 2
alarmModelVarbindValue other (1)
alarmModelDescription "Printer Alarm - unknown severity"
alarmModelSpecificPointer 0.0
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
alarmModelIndex 9
alarmModelState 4
alarmModelNotificationId printerV2Alert
alarmModelVarbindIndex 2
alarmModelVarbindValue critical (3)
alarmModelDescription "Printer Alarm"
alarmModelSpecificPointer 0.0
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
6.5 RMON Alarm Example
The RMON MIB [RFC2021] defines a mechanism for generating
threshold alarms. When the thresholds are crossed,
RisingAlarm and FallingAlarm notifications are
generated as appropriate. These notifications can
be used to model a threshold alarm as follows:
alarmModelIndex 6
alarmModelState 1
alarmModelNotificationId alarmClearState
alarmModelVarbindIndex 0
alarmModelVarbindValue 0
alarmModelDescription "RMON Alarm Clear"
alarmModelSpecificPointer 0.0
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
alarmModelIndex 6
alarmModelState 2
alarmModelNotificationId RisingAlarm
alarmModelVarbindIndex 0
alarmModelVarbindValue 0
alarmModelDescription "RMON Rising Alarm"
alarmModelSpecificPointer 0.0
alarmModelRowStatus active (1)
alarmModelIndex 6
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 51]
Alarm MIB March 2002
alarmModelState 3
alarmModelNotificationId FallingAlarm
alarmModelVarbindIndex 0
alarmModelVarbindValue 0
alarmModelDescription "RMON Falling Alarm"
alarmModelSpecificPointer 0.0
6.6 The Lifetime of an Alarm
The following example demonstrates the relationship between
the active alarm table, the clear alarm table and the
notification log MIB.
Consider a system with alarms modelled as in example 1 and which
also supports the informational notification dsx3LineStatusChange.
dsx3LineStatusChange NOTIFICATION-TYPE
OBJECTS { dsx3LineStatus,
dsx3LineStatusLastChange }
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A dsx3LineStatusChange trap is sent when the
value of an instance of dsx3LineStatus changes. It
can be utilized by an NMS to trigger polls. When
the line status change results in a lower level
line status change (i.e. ds1), then no traps for
the lower level are sent."
::= { ds3Traps 0 1 }
0. At system start, the active alarm table, alarm clear table and
the notification log are all empty.
___________________________ _______________________
| alarmActiveTable | | nlmLogTable |
|---------------------------| |-----------------------|
| alarmActiveIndex | alarm | | nlmLogPointer | notif.|
|---------------------------| |-----------------------|
|___________________________| |_______________________|
__________________________________________________
| alarmClearTable |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| alarmClear Index | alarm |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| | |
|__________________________________________________|
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 52]
Alarm MIB March 2002
1. Some time later, a link goes down generating a linkDown
notification, which is sent out and logged in the
notification log. As this notification is modelled as
an alarm state, an entry is added to the active alarm
table.
__________________________________________________
| alarmActiveTable |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| alarmActiveIndex | alarm |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| 1 | link down - problem confirmed |
|__________________________________________________|
_______________________________________________
| nlmLogTable |
|-----------------------------------------------|
| nlmLogPointer | notification |
|-----------------------------------------------|
| 1 | linkdown |
|_______________________________________________|
__________________________________________________
| alarmClearTable |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| alarmClear Index | alarm |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| | |
|__________________________________________________|
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 53]
Alarm MIB March 2002
2. Some time later, the value of an instance of dsx3LineStatus
changes. This notification is sent out and logged. As this
is not modelled into an alarm state, the active alarm table
remains unchanged.
__________________________________________________
| alarmActiveTable |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| alarmActiveIndex | alarm |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| 1 | linkDown - problem confirmed |
|__________________________________________________|
_____________________________________________
| nlmLogTable |
|---------------------------------------------|
| nlmLogPointer | notification |
|---------------------------------------------|
| 1 | linkDown |
| 2 | dsx3LineStatusChange |
|_____________________________________________|
__________________________________________________
| alarmClearTable |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| alarmClear Index | alarm |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| | |
|__________________________________________________|
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 54]
Alarm MIB March 2002
3. Some time later, the link goes back up. A linkUp notification
is sent out and logged. As this notification models
the clear alarm for this alarm, the alarm entry is remove
from the active alarm table. An entry is added to the
clear alarm table.
__________________________________________________
| alarmActiveTable |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| alarmActiveIndex | alarm |
|--------------------------------------------------|
|__________________________________________________|
_____________________________________________
| nlmLogTable |
|---------------------------------------------|
| nlmLogPointer | notification |
|---------------------------------------------|
| 1 | linkDown |
| 2 | dsx3LineStatusChange |
| 3 | linkUp |
|_____________________________________________|
__________________________________________________
| alarmClearTable |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| alarmClear Index | alarm |
|--------------------------------------------------|
| 1 | linkDown - confirmed problem |
|__________________________________________________|
7. Security Considerations
There are a number of management objects defined in this MIB
that have a MAX-ACCESS clause of read-write and/or read-create.
Such objects may be considered sensitive or vulnerable in some
network environments. The support for SET operations in a
non-secure environment without proper protection can have a
negative effect on network operations.
SNMPv1 by itself is not a secure environment. Even if the network
itself is secure (for example by using IPSec), even then, there is no
control as to who on the secure network is allowed to access and
GET/SET (read/change/create/delete) the objects in this MIB.
It is recommended that the implementers consider the security
features as provided by the SNMPv3 framework. Specifically, the use
of the User-based Security Model RFC 2574 [RFC2574] and the View-
based Access Control Model RFC 2575 [RFC2575] is recommended.
It is then a customer/user responsibility to ensure that the SNMP
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 55]
Alarm MIB March 2002
entity giving access to an instance of this MIB, is properly
configured to give access to the objects only to those principals
(users) that have legitimate rights to indeed GET or SET
(change/create/delete) them.
8. Authors' Address
Sharon Chisholm
Nortel Networks
PO Box 3511, Station C
Ottawa, Ontario, K1Y 4H7
Canada
Email: schishol@nortelnetworks.com
Dan Romascanu
Avaya Inc.
Atidim Technology Park, Bldg. #3
Tel Aviv, 61131
Israel
Tel: +972-3-645-8414
Email: dromasca@avaya.com
9. Acknowledgements
This document is a product of the DISMAN Working Group.
...
10. References
[RFC2571] Harrington, D., Presuhn, R., and B. Wijnen, "An
Architecture for Describing SNMP Management Frameworks",
RFC 2571, April 41999.
[RFC1155] Rose, M., and K. McCloghrie, "Structure and Identification
of Management Information for TCP/IP-based Internets", STD
16, RFC 1155, May 1990.
[RFC1212] Rose, M., and K. McCloghrie, "Concise MIB Definitions",
STD 16, RFC 1212, March 1991.
[RFC1215] M. Rose, "A Convention for Defining Traps for use with the
SNMP", RFC 1215, March 1991.
[RFC2578] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., Schoenwaelder, J., Case, J.,
Rose, M., and S. Waldbusser, "Structure of Management
Information Version 2 (SMIv2)", STD 58, RFC 2578, April
1999.
[RFC2579] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., Schoenwaelder, J., Case, J.,
Rose, M., and S. Waldbusser, "Textual Conventions for
SMIv2", STD 58, RFC 2579, April 1999.
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 56]
Alarm MIB March 2002
[RFC2580] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., Schoenwaelder, J., Case, J.,
Rose, M., and S. Waldbusser, "Conformance Statements for
SMIv2", STD 58, RFC 2580, April 1999.
[RFC1157] Case, J., Fedor, M., Schoffstall, M., and J. Davin,
"Simple Network Management Protocol", STD 15, RFC 1157,
May 1990.
[RFC1901] Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and S. Waldbusser,
"Introduction to Community-based SNMPv2", RFC 1901,
January 1996.
[RFC1906] Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and S. Waldbusser,
"Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1906, January 1996.
[RFC2572] Case, J., Harrington D., Presuhn R., and B. Wijnen,
"Message Processing and Dispatching for the Simple
Network Management Protocol (SNMP)", RFC 2572, April
1999.
[RFC2574] Blumenthal, U., and B. Wijnen, "User-based Security Model
(USM) for version 3 of the Simple Network Management
Protocol (SNMPv3)", RFC 2574, April 1999.
[RFC1905] Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and S. Waldbusser,
"Protocol Operations for Version 2 of the Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1905, January 1996.
[RFC2573] Levi, D., Meyer, P., and B. Stewart, "SNMPv3
Applications", RFC 2573, April 1999.
[RFC2575] Wijnen, B., Presuhn, R., and K. McCloghrie, "View-based
Access Control Model (VACM) for the Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMP)", RFC 2575, April 1999.
[RFC2570] Case, J., Mundy, R., Partain, D., and B. Stewart,
"Introduction to Version 3 of the Internet-standard
Network Management Framework", RFC 2570, April 1999.
[RFC2021] Waldbusser, S. "Remote Network Monitoring Management
Information Base Version 2 using SMIv2", RFC 2021,
January 1997
[RFC2274] Blumenthal, U. and B. Wijnen, "User-based Security
Model (USM) for version 3 of the Simple Network Management
Protocol (SNMPv3)", RFC 2274, January 1998.
[RFC2275] Wijnen, B., Presuhn, R. and K. McCloghrie, "View-based
Access Control Model (VACM) for the Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMP)", RFC 2275, January 1998.
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 57]
Alarm MIB March 2002
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC3014] Stewart, B., Kavasseri, R., "Notification Log MIB,
RFC 3014, November 2000
[RFC2037] McCloghrie, K., Brierman, A., "Entity MIB using SMIv2",
RFC2037, October 1996
[RFC2233] McCloghrie, K., Kastenholz, F., "The Interfaces Group
MIB using SMIv2", RFC2233, November 1997
[RFC1759] Smith, R., Wright, F., Hastings, T., Zilles, S.,
Gullenskop, J., "Printer MIB", RFC 1759, March 1995
[RFC2788] Freed, N., Kille, S., "Network Services Monitoring MIB",
RFC2788, March 2000
[RFC2981] Kavasseri, R., Stewart, B., "Event MIB", RFC2981,
October 2000
[M.3100] ITU Recommendation M.3100, "Generic Network Information
Model", 1995
[X.733] ITU Recommendation X.733, "Information Technology - Open
Systems Interconnection - System Management: Alarm
Reporting Function", 1992
[X.736] ITU Recommendation X.736, "Information Technology - Open
Systems Interconnection - System Management: Security
Alarm Reporting Function", 1992
11. Full Copyright Statement
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.
This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any kind,
provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be followed,
or as required to translate it into languages other than English.
The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 58]
Alarm MIB March 2002
revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT
NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN
WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Chisholm & Romascanu Standards Track [Page 59]