RFC 2576 - Coexistence between Version 1, Version 2, and Version 3 of the Internet-standard Network Management Framework

[フレーム]

Network Working Group R. Frye
Request for Comments: 2576 CoSine Communications
Category: Standards Track D. Levi
 Nortel Networks
 S. Routhier
 Integrated Systems Inc.
 B. Wijnen
 Lucent Technologies
 March 2000
 Coexistence between Version 1, Version 2, and Version 3
 of the Internet-standard Network Management Framework
Status of this Memo
 This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
 Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
 improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
 Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
 and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
Copyright Notice
 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000). All Rights Reserved.
Abstract
 The purpose of this document is to describe coexistence between
 version 3 of the Internet-standard Network Management Framework,
 (SNMPv3), version 2 of the Internet-standard Network Management
 Framework (SNMPv2), and the original Internet-standard Network
 Management Framework (SNMPv1). This document obsoletes RFC 1908 [13]
 and RFC2089 [14].
Table Of Contents
 1 Overview ..................................................... 2
 1.1 SNMPv1 ..................................................... 3
 1.2 SNMPv2 ..................................................... 4
 1.3 SNMPv3 ..................................................... 4
 1.4 SNMPv1 and SNMPv2 Access to MIB Data ....................... 5
 2 SMI and Management Information Mappings ...................... 5
 2.1 MIB Modules ................................................ 6
 2.1.1 Object Definitions ....................................... 6
 2.1.2 Trap and Notification Definitions ........................ 9
 2.2 Compliance Statements ...................................... 9
 2.3 Capabilities Statements .................................... 10
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 3 Translating Notifications Parameters ......................... 10
 3.1 Translating SNMPv1 Notification Parameters to SNMPv2
 Notification Parameters ................................... 12
 3.2 Translating SNMPv2 Notification Parameters to SNMPv1
 Notification Parameters ................................... 13
 4 Approaches to Coexistence in a Multi-lingual Network ......... 14
 4.1 Multi-lingual implementations .............................. 15
 4.1.1 Command Generator ........................................ 15
 4.1.2 Command Responder ........................................ 15
 4.1.2.1 Handling Counter64 ..................................... 16
 4.1.2.2 Mapping SNMPv2 Exceptions .............................. 16
 4.1.2.2.1 Mapping noSuchObject and noSuchInstance .............. 17
 4.1.2.2.2 Mapping endOfMibView ................................. 17
 4.1.2.3 Processing An SNMPv1 GetRequest ........................ 18
 4.1.2.4 Processing An SNMPv1 GetNextRequest .................... 19
 4.1.2.5 Processing An SNMPv1 SetRequest ........................ 20
 4.1.3 Notification Originator .................................. 20
 4.1.4 Notification Receiver .................................... 21
 4.2 Proxy Implementations ...................................... 21
 4.2.1 Upstream Version Greater Than Downstream Version ......... 21
 4.2.2 Upstream Version Less Than Downstream Version ............ 22
 4.3 Error Status Mappings ...................................... 24
 5 Message Processing Models and Security Models ................ 25
 5.1 Mappings ................................................... 25
 5.2 The SNMPv1 MP Model and SNMPv1 Community-based Security
 Model ..................................................... 26
 5.2.1 Processing An Incoming Request ........................... 26
 5.2.2 Generating An Outgoing Response .......................... 28
 5.2.3 Generating An Outgoing Notification ...................... 28
 5.3 The SNMP Community MIB Module .............................. 29
 6 Intellectual Property ........................................ 39
 7 Acknowledgments .............................................. 39
 8 Security Considerations ...................................... 40
 9 References ................................................... 40
 10 Editor's Addresses .......................................... 42
 A. Changes From RFC1908 ........................................ 43
 Full Copyright Statement ....................................... 44
1. Overview
 The purpose of this document is to describe coexistence between
 version 3 of the Internet-standard Network Management Framework,
 termed the SNMP version 3 framework (SNMPv3), version 2 of the
 Internet-standard Network Management Framework, termed the SNMP
 version 2 framework (SNMPv2), and the original Internet-standard
 Network Management Framework (SNMPv1).
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 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 RFC2119 [15].
 There are four general aspects of coexistence described in this
 document. Each of these is described in a separate section:
 - Conversion of MIB documents between SMIv1 and SMIv2 formats is
 documented in section 2.
 - Mapping of notification parameters is documented in section 3.
 - Approaches to coexistence between entities which support the
 various versions of SNMP in a multi-lingual network is
 documented in section 4. This section addresses the processing
 of protocol operations in multi-lingual implementations, as
 well as behaviour of proxy implementations.
 - The SNMPv1 Message Processing Model and Community-Based
 Security Model, which provides mechanisms for adapting SNMPv1
 into the View-Based Access Control Model (VACM) [20], is
 documented in section 5 (this section also addresses the
 SNMPv2c Message Processing Model and Community-Based Security
 Model).
1.1. SNMPv1
 SNMPv1 is defined by these documents:
 - STD 15, RFC 1157 [2] which defines the Simple Network
 Management Protocol (SNMPv1), the protocol used for network
 access to managed objects.
 - STD 16, RFC 1155 [1] which defines the Structure of Management
 Information (SMIv1), the mechanisms used for describing and
 naming objects for the purpose of management.
 - STD 16, RFC 1212 [3] which defines a more concise description
 mechanism, which is wholly consistent with the SMIv1.
 - RFC 1215 [4] which defines a convention for defining Traps for
 use with the SMIv1.
 Note that throughout this document, the term 'SMIv1' is used. This
 term generally refers to the information presented in RFC 1155, RFC
 1212, and RFC 1215.
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1.2. SNMPv2
 SNMPv2 is defined by these documents:
 - STD 58, RFC 2578 which defines Version 2 of the Structure of
 Management Information (SMIv2) [7].
 - STD 58, RFC 2579 which defines common MIB "Textual Conventions"
 [8].
 - STD 58, RFC 2580 which defines Conformance Statements and
 requirements for defining agent and manager capabilities [9].
 - RFC 1905 which defines the Protocol Operations used in
 processing [10].
 - RFC 1906 which defines the Transport Mappings used "on the
 wire" [11].
 - RFC 1907 which defines the basic Management Information Base
 for monitoring and controlling some basic common functions of
 SNMP entities [12].
 Note that SMIv2 as used throughout this document refers to the first
 three documents listed above (RFCs 2578, 2579, and 2580).
 The following document augments the definition of SNMPv2:
 - RFC 1901 [6] is an Experimental definition for using SNMPv2
 PDUs within a community-based message wrapper. This is
 referred to throughout this document as SNMPv2c.
1.3. SNMPv3
 SNMPv3 is defined by these documents:
 - RFC 2571 which defines an Architecture for Describing SNMP
 Management Frameworks [16].
 - RFC 2572 which defines Message Processing and Dispatching [17].
 - RFC 2573 which defines various SNMP Applications [18].
 - RFC 2574 which defines the User-based Security Model (USM),
 providing for both Authenticated and Private (encrypted) SNMP
 messages [19].
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 - RFC 2575 which defines the View-based Access Control Model
 (VACM), providing the ability to limit access to different MIB
 objects on a per-user basis [20].
 SNMPv3 also uses the SNMPv2 definitions of RFCs 1905 through 1907 and
 the SMIv2 definitions of 2578 through 2580 described above.
1.4. SNMPv1 and SNMPv2 Access to MIB Data
 In several places, this document refers to 'SNMPv1 Access to MIB
 Data' and 'SNMPv2 Access to MIB Data'. These terms refer to the part
 of an SNMP agent which actually accesses instances of MIB objects,
 and which actually initiates generation of notifications.
 Differences between the two types of access to MIB data are:
 - Error-status values generated.
 - Generation of exception codes.
 - Use of the Counter64 data type.
 - The format of parameters provided when a notification is
 generated.
 SNMPv1 access to MIB data may generate SNMPv1 error-status values,
 will never generate exception codes nor use the Counter64 data type,
 and will provide SNMPv1 format parameters for generating
 notifications. Note also that SNMPv1 access to MIB data will
 actually never generate a readOnly error (a noSuchName error would
 always occur in the situation where one would expect a readOnly
 error).
 SNMPv2 access to MIB data may generate SNMPv2 error-status values,
 may generate exception codes, may use the Counter64 data type, and
 will provide SNMPv2 format parameters for generating notifications.
 Note that SNMPv2 access to MIB data will never generate readOnly,
 noSuchName, or badValue errors.
 Note that a particular multi-lingual implementation may choose to
 implement all access to MIB data as SNMPv2 access to MIB data, and
 perform the translations described herein for SNMPv1-based
 transactions.
2. SMI and Management Information Mappings
 The SMIv2 approach towards describing collections of managed objects
 is nearly a proper superset of the approach defined in the SMIv1.
 For example, both approaches use an adapted subset of ASN.1 (1988)
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 [11] as the basis for a formal descriptive notation. Indeed, one
 might note that the SMIv2 approach largely codifies the existing
 practice for defining MIB modules, based on extensive experience with
 the SMIv1.
 The following sections consider the three areas: MIB modules,
 compliance statements, and capabilities statements.
2.1. MIB Modules
 MIB modules defined using the SMIv1 may continue to be used with
 protocol versions which use SNMPv2 PDUs. However, for the MIB
 modules to conform to the SMIv2, the following changes SHALL be made:
2.1.1. Object Definitions
 In general, conversion of a MIB module does not require the
 deprecation of the objects contained therein. If the definition of
 an object is truly inadequate for its intended purpose, the object
 SHALL be deprecated or obsoleted, otherwise deprecation is not
 required.
 (1) The IMPORTS statement MUST reference SNMPv2-SMI, instead of
 RFC1155-SMI and RFC-1212.
 (2) The MODULE-IDENTITY macro MUST be invoked immediately after any
 IMPORTs statement.
 (3) For any object with an integer-valued SYNTAX clause, in which
 the corresponding INTEGER does not have a range restriction
 (i.e., the INTEGER has neither a defined set of named-number
 enumerations nor an assignment of lower- and upper-bounds on its
 value), the object MUST have the value of its SYNTAX clause
 changed to Integer32, or have an appropriate range specified.
 (4) For any object with a SYNTAX clause value of Counter, the object
 MUST have the value of its SYNTAX clause changed to Counter32.
 (5) For any object with a SYNTAX clause value of Gauge, the object
 MUST have the value of its SYNTAX clause changed to Gauge32, or
 Unsigned32 where appropriate.
 (6) For all objects, the ACCESS clause MUST be replaced by a MAX-
 ACCESS clause. The value of the MAX-ACCESS clause SHALL be the
 same as that of the ACCESS clause unless some other value makes
 "protocol sense" as the maximal level of access for the object.
 In particular, object types for which instances can be
 explicitly created by a protocol set operation, SHALL have a
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 MAX-ACCESS clause of "read-create". If the value of the ACCESS
 clause is "write-only", then the value of the MAX-ACCESS clause
 MUST be "read-write", and the DESCRIPTION clause SHALL note that
 reading this object will result in implementation-specific
 results. Note that in SMIv1, the ACCESS clause specifies the
 minimal required access, while in SMIv2, the MAX-ACCESS clause
 specifies the maximum allowed access. This should be considered
 when converting an ACCESS clause to a MAX-ACCESS clause.
 (7) For all objects, if the value of the STATUS clause is
 "mandatory" or "optional", the value MUST be replaced with
 "current", "deprecated", or "obsolete" depending on the current
 usage of such objects.
 (8) For any object not containing a DESCRIPTION clause, the object
 MUST have a DESCRIPTION clause defined.
 (9) For any object corresponding to a conceptual row which does not
 have an INDEX clause, the object MUST have either an INDEX
 clause or an AUGMENTS clause defined.
 (10) If any INDEX clause contains a reference to an object with a
 syntax of NetworkAddress, then a new object MUST be created and
 placed in this INDEX clause immediately preceding the object
 whose syntax is NetworkAddress. This new object MUST have a
 syntax of INTEGER, it MUST be not-accessible, and its value MUST
 always be 1. This approach allows one to convert a MIB module
 in SMIv1 format to one in SMIv2 format, and then use it with the
 SNMPv1 protocol with no impact to existing SNMPv1 agents and
 managers.
 (11) For any object with a SYNTAX of NetworkAddress, the SYNTAX MUST
 be changed to IpAddress. Note that the use of NetworkAddress in
 new MIB documents is strongly discouraged (in fact, new MIB
 documents should be written using SMIv2, which does not define
 NetworkAddress).
 (12) For any object containing a DEFVAL clause with an OBJECT
 IDENTIFIER value which is expressed as a collection of sub-
 identifiers, the value MUST be changed to reference a single
 ASN.1 identifier. This may require defining a series of new
 administrative assignments (OBJECT IDENTIFIERS) in order to
 define the single ASN.1 identifier.
 (13) One or more OBJECT-GROUPS MUST be defined, and related objects
 SHOULD be collected into appropriate groups. Note that SMIv2
 requires all OBJECT-TYPEs to be a member of at least one
 OBJECT-GROUP.
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 Other changes are desirable, but not necessary:
 (1) Creation and deletion of conceptual rows is inconsistent using
 the SMIv1. The SMIv2 corrects this. As such, if the MIB module
 undergoes review early in its lifetime, and it contains
 conceptual tables which allow creation and deletion of
 conceptual rows, then the objects relating to those tables MAY
 be deprecated and replaced with objects defined using the new
 approach. The approach based on SMIv2 can be found in section 7
 of RFC2578 [7], and the RowStatus and StorageType TEXTUAL-
 CONVENTIONs are described in section 2 of RFC2579 [8].
 (2) For any object with a string-valued SYNTAX clause, in which the
 corresponding OCTET STRING does not have a size restriction
 (i.e., the OCTET STRING has no assignment of lower- and upper-
 bounds on its length), the bounds for the size of the object
 SHOULD be defined.
 (3) All textual conventions informally defined in the MIB module
 SHOULD be redefined using the TEXTUAL-CONVENTION macro. Such a
 change would not necessitate deprecating objects previously
 defined using an informal textual convention.
 (4) For any object which represents a measurement in some kind of
 units, a UNITS clause SHOULD be added to the definition of that
 object.
 (5) For any conceptual row which is an extension of another
 conceptual row, i.e., for which subordinate columnar objects
 both exist and are identified via the same semantics as the
 other conceptual row, an AUGMENTS clause SHOULD be used in place
 of the INDEX clause for the object corresponding to the
 conceptual row which is an extension.
 Finally, to avoid common errors in SMIv1 MIB modules:
 (1) For any non-columnar object that is instanced as if it were
 immediately subordinate to a conceptual row, the value of the
 STATUS clause of that object MUST be changed to "obsolete".
 (2) For any conceptual row object that is not contained immediately
 subordinate to a conceptual table, the value of the STATUS
 clause of that object (and all subordinate objects) MUST be
 changed to "obsolete".
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2.1.2. Trap and Notification Definitions
 If a MIB module is changed to conform to the SMIv2, then each
 occurrence of the TRAP-TYPE macro MUST be changed to a corresponding
 invocation of the NOTIFICATION-TYPE macro:
 (1) The IMPORTS statement MUST NOT reference RFC-1215 [4], and MUST
 reference SNMPv2-SMI instead.
 (2) The ENTERPRISE clause MUST be removed.
 (3) The VARIABLES clause MUST be renamed to the OBJECTS clause.
 (4) A STATUS clause MUST be added, with an appropriate value.
 Normally the value should be 'current,' although 'deprecated' or
 'obsolete' may be used as needed.
 (5) The value of an invocation of the NOTIFICATION-TYPE macro is an
 OBJECT IDENTIFIER, not an INTEGER, and MUST be changed
 accordingly. Specifically, if the value of the ENTERPRISE
 clause is not 'snmp' then the value of the invocation SHALL be
 the value of the ENTERPRISE clause extended with two sub-
 identifiers, the first of which has the value 0, and the second
 has the value of the invocation of the TRAP-TYPE. If the value
 of the ENTERPRISE clause is 'snmp', then the value of the
 invocation of the NOTIFICATION-TYPE macro SHALL be mapped in the
 same manner as described in section 3.1 in this document.
 (6) A DESCRIPTION clause MUST be added, if not already present.
 (7) One or more NOTIFICATION-GROUPs MUST be defined, and related
 notifications MUST be collected into those groups. Note that
 SMIv2 requires that all NOTIFICATION-TYPEs be a member of at
 least one NOTIFICATION-GROUP.
2.2. Compliance Statements
 For those information modules which are "standards track", a
 corresponding invocation of the MODULE-COMPLIANCE macro and related
 OBJECT-GROUP and/or NOTIFICATION-GROUP macros MUST be included within
 the information module (or in a companion information module), and
 any commentary text in the information module which relates to
 compliance SHOULD be removed. Typically this editing can occur when
 the information module undergoes review.
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 Note that a MODULE-COMPLIANCE statement is not required for a MIB
 document that is not on the standards track (for example, an
 enterprise MIB), though it may be useful in some circumstances to
 define a MODULE-COMPLIANCE statement for such a MIB document.
2.3. Capabilities Statements
 RFC1303 [5] uses the MODULE-CONFORMANCE macro to describe an agent's
 capabilities with respect to one or more MIB modules. Converting
 such a description for use with the SMIv2 requires these changes:
 (1) The macro name AGENT-CAPABILITIES SHOULD be used instead of
 MODULE-CONFORMANCE.
 (2) The STATUS clause SHOULD be added, with a value of 'current'.
 (3) All occurrences of the CREATION-REQUIRES clause MUST either be
 omitted if appropriate, or be changed such that the semantics
 are consistent with RFC2580 [9].
 In order to ease coexistence, object groups defined in an SMIv1
 compliant MIB module may be referenced by the INCLUDES clause of an
 invocation of the AGENT-CAPABILITIES macro: upon encountering a
 reference to an OBJECT IDENTIFIER subtree defined in an SMIv1 MIB
 module, all leaf objects which are subordinate to the subtree and
 have a STATUS clause value of mandatory are deemed to be INCLUDED.
 (Note that this method is ambiguous when different revisions of an
 SMIv1 MIB have different sets of mandatory objects under the same
 subtree; in such cases, the only solution is to rewrite the MIB using
 the SMIv2 in order to define the object groups unambiguously.)
3. Translating Notifications Parameters
 This section describes how parameters used for generating
 notifications are translated between the format used for SNMPv1
 notification protocol operations and the format used for SNMPv2
 notification protocol operations. The parameters used to generate a
 notification are called 'notification parameters'. The format of
 parameters used for SNMPv1 notification protocol operations is
 refered to in this document as 'SNMPv1 notification parameters'. The
 format of parameters used for SNMPv2 notification protocol operations
 is refered to in this document as 'SNMPv2 notification parameters'.
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 The situations where notification parameters MUST be translated are:
 - When an entity generates a set of notification parameters in a
 particular format, and the configuration of the entity
 indicates that the notification must be sent using an SNMP
 message version that requires the other format for notification
 parameters.
 - When a proxy receives a notification that was sent using an
 SNMP message version that requires one format of notification
 parameters, and must forward the notification using an SNMP
 message version that requires the other format of notification
 parameters.
 In addition, it MAY be desirable to translate notification parameters
 in a notification receiver application in order to present
 notifications to the end user in a consistent format.
 Note that for the purposes of this section, the set of notification
 parameters is independent of whether the notification is to be sent
 as a trap or an inform.
 SNMPv1 notification parameters consist of:
 - An enterprise parameter (OBJECT IDENTIFIER).
 - An agent-addr parameter (NetworkAddress).
 - A generic-trap parameter (INTEGER).
 - A specific-trap parameter (INTEGER).
 - A time-stamp parameter (TimeTicks).
 - A list of variable-bindings (VarBindList).
 SNMPv2 notification parameters consist of:
 - A sysUpTime parameter (TimeTicks). This appears in the first
 variable-binding in an SNMPv2-Trap-PDU or InformRequest-PDU.
 - An snmpTrapOID parameter (OBJECT IDENTIFIER). This appears in
 the second variable-binding in an SNMPv2-Trap-PDU or
 InformRequest-PDU.
 - A list of variable-bindings (VarBindList). This refers to all
 but the first two variable-bindings in an SNMPv2-Trap-PDU or
 InformRequest-PDU.
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3.1. Translating SNMPv1 Notification Parameters to SNMPv2 Notification
 Parameters
 The following procedure describes how to translate SNMPv1
 notification parameters into SNMPv2 notification parameters:
 (1) The SNMPv2 sysUpTime parameter SHALL be taken directly from the
 SNMPv1 time-stamp parameter.
 (2) If the SNMPv1 generic-trap parameter is 'enterpriseSpecific(6)',
 the SNMPv2 snmpTrapOID parameter SHALL be the concatentation of
 the SNMPv1 enterprise parameter and two additional sub-
 identifiers, '0', and the SNMPv1 specific-trap parameter.
 (3) If the SNMPv1 generic-trap parameter is not '
 enterpriseSpecific(6)', the SNMPv2 snmpTrapOID parameter SHALL
 be the corresponding trap as defined in section 2 of RFC1907
 [12]:
 generic-trap parameter snmpTrapOID.0
 ====================== =============
 0 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.1 (coldStart)
 1 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.2 (warmStart)
 2 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.3 (linkDown)
 3 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.4 (linkUp)
 4 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.5 (authenticationFailure)
 5 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.6 (egpNeighborLoss)
 (4) The SNMPv2 variable-bindings SHALL be the SNMPv1 variable-
 bindings. In addition, if the translation is being performed by
 a proxy in order to forward a received trap, three additional
 variable-bindings will be appended, if these three additional
 variable-bindings do not already exist in the SNMPv1 variable-
 bindings. The name portion of the first additional variable
 binding SHALL contain snmpTrapAddress.0, and the value SHALL
 contain the SNMPv1 agent-addr parameter. The name portion of
 the second additional variable binding SHALL contain
 snmpTrapCommunity.0, and the value SHALL contain the value of
 the community-string field from the received SNMPv1 message
 which contained the SNMPv1 Trap-PDU. The name portion of the
 third additional variable binding SHALL contain
 snmpTrapEnterprise.0 [12], and the value SHALL be the SNMPv1
 enterprise parameter.
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3.2. Translating SNMPv2 Notification Parameters to SNMPv1 Notification
 Parameters
 The following procedure describes how to translate SNMPv2
 notification parameters into SNMPv1 notification parameters:
 (1) The SNMPv1 enterprise parameter SHALL be determined as follows:
 - If the SNMPv2 snmpTrapOID parameter is one of the standard
 traps as defined in RFC1907 [12], then the SNMPv1 enterprise
 parameter SHALL be set to the value of the variable-binding in
 the SNMPv2 variable-bindings whose name is snmpTrapEnterprise.0
 if that variable-binding exists. If it does not exist, the
 SNMPv1 enterprise parameter SHALL be set to the value '
 snmpTraps' as defined in RFC1907 [12].
 - If the SNMPv2 snmpTrapOID parameter is not one of the standard
 traps as defined in RFC1907 [12], then the SNMPv1 enterprise
 parameter SHALL be determined from the SNMPv2 snmpTrapOID
 parameter as follows:
 - If the next-to-last sub-identifier of the snmpTrapOID is
 zero, then the SNMPv1 enterprise SHALL be the SNMPv2
 snmpTrapOID with the last 2 sub-identifiers removed,
 otherwise
 - If the next-to-last sub-identifier of the snmpTrapOID is
 non-zero, then the SNMPv1 enterprise SHALL be the SNMPv2
 snmpTrapOID with the last sub-identifier removed.
 (2) The SNMPv1 agent-addr parameter SHALL be determined based on the
 situation in which the translation occurs.
 - If the translation occurs within a notification originator
 application, and the notification is to be sent over IP, the
 SNMPv1 agent-addr parameter SHALL be set to the IP address of
 the SNMP entity in which the notification originator resides.
 If the notification is to be sent over some other transport,
 the SNMPv1 agent-addr parameter SHALL be set to 0.0.0.0.
 - If the translation occurs within a proxy application, the proxy
 must attempt to extract the original source of the notification
 from the variable-bindings. If the SNMPv2 variable-bindings
 contains a variable binding whose name is snmpTrapAddress.0,
 the agent-addr parameter SHALL be set to the value of that
 variable binding. Otherwise, the SNMPv1 agent-addr parameter
 SHALL be set to 0.0.0.0.
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 (3) If the SNMPv2 snmpTrapOID parameter is one of the standard traps
 as defined in RFC1907 [12], the SNMPv1 generic-trap parameter
 SHALL be set as follows:
 snmpTrapOID.0 parameter generic-trap
 =============================== ============
 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.1 (coldStart) 0
 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.2 (warmStart) 1
 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.3 (linkDown) 2
 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.4 (linkUp) 3
 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.5 (authenticationFailure) 4
 1.3.6.1.6.3.1.1.5.6 (egpNeighborLoss) 5
 Otherwise, the SNMPv1 generic-trap parameter SHALL be set to 6.
 (4) If the SNMPv2 snmpTrapOID parameter is one of the standard traps
 as defined in RFC1907 [12], the SNMPv1 specific-trap parameter
 SHALL be set to zero. Otherwise, the SNMPv1 specific-trap
 parameter SHALL be set to the last sub-identifier of the SNMPv2
 snmpTrapOID parameter.
 (5) The SNMPv1 time-stamp parameter SHALL be taken directly from the
 SNMPv2 sysUpTime parameter.
 (6) The SNMPv1 variable-bindings SHALL be the SNMPv2 variable-
 bindings. Note, however, that if the SNMPv2 variable-bindings
 contain any objects whose type is Counter64, the translation to
 SNMPv1 notification parameters cannot be performed. In this
 case, the notification cannot be encoded in an SNMPv1 packet
 (and so the notification cannot be sent using SNMPv1, see
 section 4.1.3 and section 4.2).
4. Approaches to Coexistence in a Multi-lingual Network
 There are two basic approaches to coexistence in a multi-lingual
 network, multi-lingual implementations and proxy implementations.
 Multi-lingual implementations allow elements in a network to
 communicate with each other using an SNMP version which both elements
 support. This allows a multi-lingual implementation to communicate
 with any mono-lingual implementation, regardless of the SNMP version
 supported by the mono-lingual implementation.
 Proxy implementations provide a mechanism for translating between
 SNMP versions using a third party network element. This allows
 network elements which support only a single, but different, SNMP
 version to communicate with each other. Proxy implementations are
 also useful for securing communications over an insecure link between
 two locally secure networks.
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4.1. Multi-lingual implementations
 This approach requires an entity to support multiple SNMP message
 versions. Typically this means supporting SNMPv1, SNMPv2c, and
 SNMPv3 message versions. The behaviour of various types of SNMP
 applications which support multiple message versions is described in
 the following sections. This approach allows entities which support
 multiple SNMP message versions to coexist with and communicate with
 entities which support only a single SNMP message version.
4.1.1. Command Generator
 A command generator must select an appropriate message version when
 sending requests to another entity. One way to achieve this is to
 consult a local database to select the appropriate message version.
 In addition, a command generator MUST 'downgrade' GetBulk requests to
 GetNext requests when selecting SNMPv1 as the message version for an
 outgoing request. This is done by simply changing the operation type
 to GetNext, ignoring any non-repeaters and max-repetitions values,
 and setting error-status and error-index to zero.
4.1.2. Command Responder
 A command responder must be able to deal with both SNMPv1 and SNMPv2
 access to MIB data. There are three aspects to dealing with this. A
 command responder must:
 - Deal correctly with SNMPv2 access to MIB data that returns a
 Counter64 value while processing an SNMPv1 message,
 - Deal correctly with SNMPv2 access to MIB data that returns one
 of the three exception values while processing an SNMPv1
 message, and
 - Map SNMPv2 error codes returned from SNMPv2 access to MIB data
 into SNMPv1 error codes when processing an SNMPv1 message.
 Note that SNMPv1 error codes SHOULD NOT be used without any change
 when processing SNMPv2c or SNMPv3 messages, except in the case of
 proxy forwarding. In the case of proxy forwarding, for backwards
 compatibility, SNMPv1 error codes may be used without any change in a
 forwarded SNMPv2c or SNMPv3 message.
 The following sections describe the behaviour of a command responder
 application which supports multiple SNMP message versions, and which
 uses some combination of SNMPv1 and SNMPv2 access to MIB data.
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4.1.2.1. Handling Counter64
 The SMIv2 [7] defines one new syntax that is incompatible with SMIv1.
 This syntax is Counter64. All other syntaxes defined by SMIv2 are
 compatible with SMIv1.
 The impact on multi-lingual command responders is that they MUST NOT
 ever return a variable binding containing a Counter64 value in a
 response to a request that was received using the SNMPv1 message
 version.
 Multi-lingual command responders SHALL take the approach that object
 instances whose type is Counter64 are implicitly excluded from view
 when processing an SNMPv1 message. So:
 - On receipt of an SNMPv1 GetRequest-PDU containing a variable
 binding whose name field points to an object instance of type
 Counter64, a GetResponsePDU SHALL be returned, with an error-
 status of noSuchName and the error-index set to the variable
 binding that caused this error.
 - On an SNMPv1 GetNextRequest-PDU, any object instance which
 contains a syntax of Counter64 SHALL be skipped, and the next
 accessible object instance that does not have the syntax of
 Counter64 SHALL be retrieved. If no such object instance
 exists, then an error-status of noSuchName SHALL be returned,
 and the error-index SHALL be set to the variable binding that
 caused this error.
 - Any SNMPv1 request which contains a variable binding with a
 Counter64 value is ill-formed, so the foregoing rules do not
 apply. If that error is detected, a response SHALL NOT be
 returned, since it would contain a copy of the ill-formed
 variable binding. Instead, the offending PDU SHALL be
 discarded and the counter snmpInASNParseErrs SHALL be
 incremented.
4.1.2.2. Mapping SNMPv2 Exceptions
 SNMPv2 provides a feature called exceptions, which allow an SNMPv2
 Response PDU to return as much management information as possible,
 even when an error occurs. However, SNMPv1 does not support
 exceptions, and so an SNMPv1 Response PDU cannot return any
 management information, and can only return an error-status and
 error-index value.
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 When an SNMPv1 request is received, a command responder MUST check
 any variable bindings returned using SNMPv2 access to MIB data for
 exception values, and convert these exception values into SNMPv1
 error codes.
 The type of exception that can be returned when accessing MIB data
 and the action taken depends on the type of SNMP request.
 - For a GetRequest, a noSuchObject or noSuchInstance exception
 may be returned.
 - For a GetNextRequest, an endOfMibView exception may be
 returned.
 - No exceptions will be returned for a SetRequest, and a
 GetBulkRequest should only be received in an SNMPv2c or SNMPv3
 message, so these request types may be ignored when mapping
 exceptions.
 Note that when a response contains multiple exceptions, it is an
 implementation choice as to which variable binding the error-index
 should reference.
4.1.2.2.1. Mapping noSuchObject and noSuchInstance
 A noSuchObject or noSuchInstance exception generated by an SNMPv2
 access to MIB data indicates that the requested object instance can
 not be returned. The SNMPv1 error code for this condition is
 noSuchName, and so the error-status field of the response PDU SHALL
 be set to noSuchName. Also, the error-index field SHALL be set to
 the index of the variable binding for which an exception occurred
 (there may be more than one and it is an implementation decision as
 to which is used), and the variable binding list from the original
 request SHALL be returned with the response PDU.
4.1.2.2.2. Mapping endOfMibView
 When an SNMPv2 access to MIB data returns a variable binding
 containing an endOfMibView exception, it indicates that there are no
 object instances available which lexicographically follow the object
 in the request. In an SNMPv1 agent, this condition normally results
 in a noSuchName error, and so the error-status field of the response
 PDU SHALL be set to noSuchName. Also, the error-index field SHALL be
 set to the index of the variable binding for which an exception
 occurred (there may be more than one and it is an implementation
 decision as to which is used), and the variable binding list from the
 original request SHALL be returned with the response PDU.
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4.1.2.3. Processing An SNMPv1 GetRequest
 When processing an SNMPv1 GetRequest, the following procedures MUST
 be followed when using an SNMPv2 access to MIB data.
 When such an access to MIB data returns response data using SNMPv2
 syntax and error-status values, then:
 (1) If the error-status is anything other than noError,
 - The error status SHALL be translated to an SNMPv1 error-status
 using the table in section 4.3, "Error Status Mappings".
 - The error-index SHALL be set to the position (in the original
 request) of the variable binding that caused the error-status.
 - The variable binding list of the response PDU SHALL be made
 exactly the same as the variable binding list that was received
 in the original request.
 (2) If the error-status is noError, the variable bindings SHALL be
 checked for any SNMPv2 exception (noSuchObject or
 noSuchInstance) or an SNMPv2 syntax that is unknown to SNMPv1
 (Counter64). If there are any such variable bindings, one of
 those variable bindings SHALL be selected (it is an
 implementation choice as to which is selected), and:
 - The error-status SHALL be set to noSuchName,
 - The error-index SHALL be set to the position (in the variable
 binding list of the original request) of the selected variable
 binding, and
 - The variable binding list of the response PDU SHALL be exactly
 the same as the variable binding list that was received in the
 original request.
 (3) If there are no such variable bindings, then:
 - The error-status SHALL be set to noError,
 - The error-index SHALL be set to zero, and
 - The variable binding list of the response SHALL be composed
 from the data as it is returned by the access to MIB data.
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4.1.2.4. Processing An SNMPv1 GetNextRequest
 When processing an SNMPv1 GetNextRequest, the following procedures
 MUST be followed when an SNMPv2 access to MIB data is called as part
 of processing the request. There may be repetitive accesses to MIB
 data to try to find the first object which lexicographically follows
 each of the objects in the request. This is implementation specific.
 These procedures are followed only for data returned when using
 SNMPv2 access to MIB data. Data returned using SNMPv1 access to MIB
 data may be treated in the normal manner for an SNMPv1 request.
 First, if the access to MIB data returns an error-status of anything
 other than noError:
 (1) The error status SHALL be translated to an SNMPv1 error-status
 using the table in section 4.3, "Error Status Mappings".
 (2) The error-index SHALL be set to the position (in the original
 request) of the variable binding that caused the error-status.
 (3) The variable binding list of the response PDU SHALL be exactly
 the same as the variable binding list that was received in the
 original request.
 Otherwise, if the access to MIB data returns an error-status of
 noError:
 (1) Any variable bindings containing an SNMPv2 syntax of Counter64
 SHALL be considered to be not in view, and MIB data SHALL be
 accessed as many times as is required until either a value other
 than Counter64 is returned, or an error occurs.
 (2) If there is any variable binding that contains an SNMPv2
 exception endOfMibView (there may be more than one, it is an
 implementation decision as to which is chosen):
 - The error-status SHALL be set to noSuchName,
 - The error-index SHALL be set to the position (in the variable
 binding list of the original request) of the variable binding
 that returned such an SNMPv2 exception, and
 - The variable binding list of the response PDU SHALL be exactly
 the same as the variable binding list that was received in the
 original request.
 (3) If there are no such variable bindings, then:
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 - The error-status SHALL be set to noError,
 - The error-index SHALL be set to zero, and
 - The variable binding list of the response SHALL be composed
 from the data as it is returned by the access to MIB data.
4.1.2.5. Processing An SNMPv1 SetRequest
 When processing an SNMPv1 SetRequest, the following procedures MUST
 be followed when calling SNMPv2 MIB access routines.
 When such MIB access routines return response data using SNMPv2
 syntax and error-status values, and the error-status is anything
 other than noError, then:
 - The error status SHALL be translated to an SNMPv1 error-status
 using the table in section 4.3, "Error Status Mappings".
 - The error-index SHALL be set to the position (in the original
 request) of the variable binding that caused the error-status.
 - The variable binding list of the response PDU SHALL be made
 exactly the same as the variable binding list that was received
 in the original request.
4.1.3. Notification Originator
 A notification originator must be able to translate between SNMPv1
 notifications parameters and SNMPv2 notification parameters in order
 to send a notification using a particular SNMP message version. If a
 notification is generated using SNMPv1 notification parameters, and
 configuration information specifies that notifications be sent using
 SNMPv2c or SNMPv3, the notification parameters must be translated to
 SNMPv2 notification parameters. Likewise, if a notification is
 generated using SNMPv2 notification parameters, and configuration
 information specifies that notifications be sent using SNMPv1, the
 notification parameters must be translated to SNMPv1 notification
 parameters. In this case, if the notification cannot be translated
 (due to the presence of a Counter64 type), it will not be sent using
 SNMPv1.
 When a notification originator generates a notification, using
 parameters obtained from the SNMP-TARGET-MIB and SNMP-NOTIFICATION-
 MIB, if the SNMP version used to generate the notification is SNMPv1,
 the PDU type used will always be a TrapPDU, regardless of whether the
 value of snmpNotifyType is trap(1) or inform(2).
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 Note also that access control and notification filtering are
 performed in the usual manner for notifications, regardless of the
 SNMP message version to be used when sending a notification. The
 parameters for performing access control are found in the usual
 manner (i.e., from inspecting the SNMP-TARGET-MIB and SNMP-
 NOTIFICATION-MIB). In particular, when generating an SNMPv1 Trap, in
 order to perform the access check specified in [18], section 3.3,
 bullet (3), the notification originator may need to generate a value
 for snmpTrapOID.0 as described in section 3.1, bullets (2) and (3) of
 this document. If the SNMPv1 notification parameters being used were
 previously translated from a set of SNMPv2 notification parameters,
 this value may already be known, in which case it need not be
 generated.
4.1.4. Notification Receiver
 There are no special requirements of a notification receiver.
 However, an implementation may find it useful to allow a higher level
 application to request whether notifications should be delivered to a
 higher level application using SNMPv1 notification parameter or
 SNMPv2 notification parameters. The notification receiver would then
 translate notification parameters when required in order to present a
 notification using the desired set of parameters.
4.2. Proxy Implementations
 A proxy implementation may be used to enable communication between
 entities which support different SNMP message versions. This is
 accomplished in a proxy forwarder application by performing
 translations on PDUs. These translations depend on the PDU type, the
 SNMP version of the packet containing a received PDU, and the SNMP
 version to be used to forward a received PDU. The following sections
 describe these translations. In all cases other than those described
 below, the proxy SHALL forward a received PDU without change, subject
 to size constraints as defined in section 5.3 (Community MIB) of this
 document. Note that in the following sections, the 'Upstream
 Version' refers to the version used between the command generator and
 the proxy, and the 'Downstream Version' refers to the version used
 between the proxy and the command responder, regardless of the PDU
 type or direction.
4.2.1. Upstream Version Greater Than Downstream Version
 - If a GetBulkRequest-PDU is received and must be forwarded using
 the SNMPv1 message version, the proxy forwarder SHALL set the
 non-repeaters and max-repetitions fields to 0, and SHALL set the
 tag of the PDU to GetNextRequest-PDU.
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 - If a GetResponse-PDU is received whose error-status field has a
 value of 'tooBig', the message will be forwarded using the SNMPv2c
 or SNMPv3 message version, and the original request received by
 the proxy was not a GetBulkRequest-PDU, the proxy forwarder SHALL
 remove the contents of the variable-bindings field before
 forwarding the response.
 - If a GetResponse-PDU is received whose error-status field has a
 value of 'tooBig,' and the message will be forwarded using the
 SNMPv2c or SNMPv3 message version, and the original request
 received by the proxy was a GetBulkRequest-PDU, the proxy
 forwarder SHALL re-send the forwarded request (which would have
 been altered to be a GetNextRequest-PDU) with all but the first
 variable-binding removed. The proxy forwarder SHALL only re-send
 such a request a single time. If the resulting GetResponse-PDU
 also contains an error-status field with a value of 'tooBig,' then
 the proxy forwarder SHALL remove the contents of the variable-
 bindings field, and change the error-status field to 'noError'
 before forwarding the response. Note that if the original request
 only contained a single variable-binding, the proxy may skip re-
 sending the request and simply remove the variable-bindings and
 change the error-status to 'noError.'
 - If a Trap-PDU is received, and will be forwarded using the SNMPv2c
 or SNMPv3 message version, the proxy SHALL apply the translation
 rules described in section 3, and SHALL forward the notification
 as an SNMPv2-Trap-PDU.
 Note that when an SNMPv1 agent generates a message containing a
 Trap-PDU which is subsequently forwarded by one or more proxy
 forwarders using SNMP versions other than SNMPv1, the community
 string and agent-addr fields from the original message generated
 by the SNMPv1 agent will be preserved through the use of the
 snmpTrapAddress and snmpTrapCommunity nobjects.
4.2.2. Upstream Version Less Than Downstream Version
 - If a GetResponse-PDU is received in response to a GetRequest-PDU
 (previously generated by the proxy) which contains variable-
 bindings of type Counter64 or which contain an SNMPv2 exception
 code, and the message would be forwarded using the SNMPv1 message
 version, the proxy MUST generate an alternate response PDU
 consisting of the request-id and variable bindings from the
 original SNMPv1 request, containing a noSuchName error-status
 value, and containing an error-index value indicating the position
 of the variable-binding containing the Counter64 type or exception
 code.
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 - If a GetResponse-PDU is received in response to a GetNextRequest-
 PDU (previously generated by the proxy) which contains variable-
 bindings that contain an SNMPv2 exception code, and the message
 would be forwarded using the SNMPv1 message version, the proxy
 MUST generate an alternate response PDU consisting of the
 request-id and variable bindings from the original SNMPv1 request,
 containing a noSuchName error-status value, and containing an
 error-index value indicating the position of the variable-binding
 containing the exception code.
 - If a GetResponse-PDU is received in response to a GetNextRequest-
 PDU (previously generated by the proxy) which contains variable-
 bindings of type Counter64, the proxy MUST re-send the entire
 GetNextRequest-PDU, with the following modifications. For any
 variable bindings in the received GetResponse which contained
 Counter64 types, the proxy substitutes the object names of these
 variable bindings for the corresponding object names in the
 previously-sent GetNextRequest. The proxy MUST repeat this
 process until no Counter64 objects are returned. Note that an
 implementation may attempt to optimize this process of skipping
 Counter64 objects. One approach to such an optimization would be
 to replace the last sub-identifier of the object names of varbinds
 containing a Counter64 type with 65535 if that sub-identifier is
 less than 65535, or with 4294967295 if that sub-identifier is
 greater than 65535. This approach should skip multiple instances
 of the same Counter64 object, while maintaining compatibility with
 some broken agent implementations (which only use 16-bit integers
 for sub-identifiers).
 Deployment Hint: The process of repeated GetNext requests used by
 a proxy when Counter64 types are returned can be expensive. When
 deploying a proxy, this can be avoided by configuring the target
 agents to which the proxy forwards requests in a manner such that
 any objects of type Counter64 are in fact not-in-view for the
 principal that the proxy is using when communicating with these
 agents.
 - If a GetResponse-PDU is received which contains an SNMPv2 error-
 status value of wrongValue, wrongEncoding, wrongType, wrongLength,
 inconsistentValue, noAccess, notWritable, noCreation,
 inconsistentName, resourceUnavailable, commitFailed, undoFailed,
 or authorizationError, the error-status value is modified using
 the mappings in section 4.3.
 - If an SNMPv2-Trap-PDU is received, and will be forwarded using the
 SNMPv1 message version, the proxy SHALL apply the translation
 rules described in section 3, and SHALL forward the notification
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 as a Trap-PDU. Note that if the translation fails due to the
 existence of a Counter64 data-type in the received SNMPv2-Trap-
 PDU, the trap cannot be forwarded using SNMPv1.
 - If an InformRequest-PDU is received, any configuration information
 indicating that it would be forwarded using the SNMPv1 message
 version SHALL be ignored. An InformRequest-PDU can only be
 forwarded using the SNMPv2c or SNMPv3 message version. The
 InformRequest-PDU may still be forwarded if there is other
 configuration information indicating that it should be forwarded
 using SNMPv2c or SNMPv3.
4.3. Error Status Mappings
 The following tables shows the mappings of SNMPv1 error-status values
 into SNMPv2 error-status values, and the mappings of SNMPv2 error-
 status values into SNMPv1 error-status values.
 SNMPv1 error-status SNMPv2 error-status
 =================== ===================
 noError noError
 tooBig tooBig
 noSuchName noSuchName
 badValue badValue
 genErr genErr
 SNMPv2 error-status SNMPv1 error-status
 =================== ===================
 noError noError
 tooBig tooBig
 genErr genErr
 wrongValue badValue
 wrongEncoding badValue
 wrongType badValue
 wrongLength badValue
 inconsistentValue badValue
 noAccess noSuchName
 notWritable noSuchName
 noCreation noSuchName
 inconsistentName noSuchName
 resourceUnavailable genErr
 commitFailed genErr
 undoFailed genErr
 authorizationError noSuchName
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 Whenever the SNMPv2 error-status value of authorizationError is
 translated to an SNMPv1 error-status value of noSuchName, the value
 of snmpInBadCommunityUses MUST be incremented.
5. Message Processing Models and Security Models
 In order to adapt SNMPv1 (and SNMPv2c) into the SNMP architecture,
 the following models are defined in this document:
 - The SNMPv1 Message Processing Model
 - The SNMPv1 Community-Based Security Model
 The following models are also described in this document:
 - The SNMPv2c Message Processing Model
 - The SNMPv2c Community-Based Security Model
 In most respects, the SNMPv1 Message Processing Model and the
 SNMPv2c Message Processing Model are identical, and so these
 are not discussed independently in this document. Differences
 between the two models are described as required.
 Similarly, the SNMPv1 Community-Based Security Model and the
 SNMPv2c Community-Based Security Model are nearly identical,
 and so are not discussed independently. Differences between
 these two models are also described as required.
5.1. Mappings
 The SNMPv1 (and SNMPv2c) Message Processing Model and Security Model
 require mappings between parameters used in SNMPv1 (and SNMPv2c)
 messages, and the version independent parameters used in the SNMP
 architecture [16]. The parameters which MUST be mapped consist of
 the SNMPv1 (and SNMPv2c) community name, and the SNMP securityName
 and contextEngineID/contextName pair. A MIB module (the SNMP-
 COMMUNITY-MIB) is provided in this document in order to perform these
 mappings. This MIB provides mappings in both directions, that is, a
 community name may be mapped to a securityName, contextEngineID, and
 contextName, or the combination of securityName, contextEngineID, and
 contextName may be mapped to a community name.
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5.2. The SNMPv1 MP Model and SNMPv1 Community-based Security Model
 The SNMPv1 Message Processing Model handles processing of SNMPv1
 messages. The processing of messages is handled generally in the
 same manner as described in RFC1157 [2], with differences and
 clarifications as described in the following sections. The
 SnmpMessageProcessingModel value for SNMPv1 is 0 (the value for
 SNMPv2c is 1).
5.2.1. Processing An Incoming Request
 In RFC1157 [2], section 4.1, item (3) for an entity which receives a
 message, states that various parameters are passed to the 'desired
 authentication scheme.' The desired authentication scheme in this
 case is the SNMPv1 Community-Based Security Model, which will be
 called using the processIncomingMsg ASI. The parameters passed to
 this ASI are:
 - The messageProcessingModel, which will be 0 (or 1 for SNMPv2c).
 - The maxMessageSize, which should be the maximum size of a
 message that the receiving entity can generate (since there is
 no such value in the received message).
 - The securityParameters, which consist of the community string
 and the message's source and destination transport domains and
 addresses.
 - The securityModel, which will be 1 (or 2 for SNMPv2c).
 - The securityLevel, which will be noAuthNoPriv.
 - The wholeMsg and wholeMsgLength.
 The Community-Based Security Model will attempt to select a row in
 the snmpCommunityTable. This is done by performing a search through
 the snmpCommunityTable in lexicographic order. The first entry for
 which the following matching criteria are satisfied will be selected:
 - The community string is equal to the snmpCommunityName value.
 - If the snmpCommunityTransportTag is an empty string, it is
 ignored for the purpose of matching. If the
 snmpCommunityTransportTag is not an empty string, the
 transportDomain and transportAddress from which the message was
 received must match one of the entries in the
 snmpTargetAddrTable selected by the snmpCommunityTransportTag
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 value. The snmpTargetAddrTMask object is used as described in
 section 5.3 when checking whether the transportDomain and
 transportAddress matches a entry in the snmpTargetAddrTable.
 If no such entry can be found, an authentication failure occurs as
 described in RFC1157 [2], and the snmpInBadCommunityNames counter is
 incremented.
 The parameters returned from the Community-Based Security Model are:
 - The securityEngineID, which will always be the local value of
 snmpEngineID.0.
 - The securityName.
 - The scopedPDU. Note that this parameter will actually consist
 of three values, the contextSnmpEngineID, the contextName, and
 the PDU. These must be separate values, since the first two do
 not actually appear in the message.
 - The maxSizeResponseScopedPDU.
 - The securityStateReference.
 The appropriate SNMP application will then be called (depending on
 the value of the contextEngineID and the request type in the PDU)
 using the processPdu ASI. The parameters passed to this ASI are:
 - The messageProcessingModel, which will be 0 (or 1 for SNMPv2c).
 - The securityModel, which will be 1 (or 2 for SNMPv2c).
 - The securityName, which was returned from the call to
 processIncomingMsg.
 - The securityLevel, which is noAuthNoPriv.
 - The contextEngineID, which was returned as part of the
 ScopedPDU from the call to processIncomingMsg.
 - The contextName, which was returned as part of the ScopedPDU
 from the call to processIncomingMsg.
 - The pduVersion, which should indicate an SNMPv1 version PDU (if
 the message version was SNMPv2c, this would be an SNMPv2
 version PDU).
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 - The PDU, which was returned as part of the ScopedPDU from the
 call to processIncomingMsg.
 - The maxSizeResponseScopedPDU which was returned from the call
 to processIncomingMsg.
 - The stateReference which was returned from the call to
 processIncomingMsg.
 The SNMP application should process the request as described
 previously in this document. Note that access control is applied by
 an SNMPv3 command responder application as usual. The parameters as
 passed to the processPdu ASI will be used in calls to the
 isAccessAllowed ASI.
5.2.2. Generating An Outgoing Response
 There is no special processing required for generating an outgoing
 response. However, the community string used in an outgoing response
 must be the same as the community string from the original request.
 The original community string MUST be present in the stateReference
 information of the original request.
5.2.3. Generating An Outgoing Notification
 In a multi-lingual SNMP entity, the parameters used for generating
 notifications will be obtained by examining the SNMP-TARGET-MIB and
 SNMP-NOTIFICATION-MIB. These parameters will be passed to the SNMPv1
 Message Processing Model using the sendPdu ASI. The SNMPv1 Message
 Processing Model will attempt to locate an appropriate community
 string in the snmpCommunityTable based on the parameters passed to
 the sendPdu ASI. This is done by performing a search through the
 snmpCommunityTable in lexicographic order. The first entry for which
 the following matching criteria are satisfied will be selected:
 - The securityName must be equal to the snmpCommunitySecurityName
 value.
 - The contextEngineID must be equal to the
 snmpCommunityContextEngineID value.
 - The contextName must be equal to the snmpCommunityContextName
 value.
 - If the snmpCommunityTransportTag is an empty string, it is
 ignored for the purpose of matching. If the
 snmpCommunityTransportTag is not an empty string, the
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 transportDomain and transportAddress must match one of the
 entries in the snmpTargetAddrTable selected by the
 snmpCommunityTransportTag value.
 If no such entry can be found, the notification is not sent.
 Otherwise, the community string used in the outgoing notification
 will be the value of the snmpCommunityName column of the selected
 row.
5.3. The SNMP Community MIB Module
 The SNMP-COMMUNITY-MIB contains objects for mapping between community
 strings and version-independent SNMP message parameters. In
 addition, this MIB provides a mechanism for performing source address
 validation on incoming requests, and for selecting community strings
 based on target addresses for outgoing notifications. These two
 features are accomplished by providing a tag in the
 snmpCommunityTable which selects sets of entries in the
 snmpTargetAddrTable [18]. In addition, the SNMP-COMMUNITY-MIB
 augments the snmpTargetAddrTable with a transport address mask value
 and a maximum message size value. These values are used only where
 explicitly stated. In cases where the snmpTargetAddrTable is used
 without mention of these augmenting values, the augmenting values
 should be ignored.
 The mask value, snmpTargetAddrTMask, allows selected entries in the
 snmpTargetAddrTable to specify multiple addresses (rather than just a
 single address per entry). This would typically be used to specify a
 subnet in an snmpTargetAddrTable rather than just a single address.
 The mask value is used to select which bits of a transport address
 must match bits of the corresponding instance of
 snmpTargetAddrTAddress, in order for the transport address to match a
 particular entry in the snmpTargetAddrTable. The value of an
 instance of snmpTargetAddrTMask must always be an OCTET STRING whose
 length is either zero or the same as that of the corresponding
 instance of snmpTargetAddrTAddress.
 Note that the snmpTargetAddrTMask object is only used where
 explicitly stated. In particular, it is not used when generating
 notifications (i.e., when generating notifications, entries in the
 snmpTargetAddrTable only specify individual addresses).
 When checking whether a transport address matches an entry in the
 snmpTargetAddrTable, if the value of snmpTargetAddrTMask is a zero-
 length OCTET STRING, the mask value is ignored, and the value of
 snmpTargetAddrTAddress must exactly match a transport address.
 Otherwise, each bit of each octet in the snmpTargetAddrTMask value
 corresponds to the same bit of the same octet in the
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 29]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
 snmpTargetAddrTAddress value. For bits that are set in the
 snmpTargetAddrTMask value (i.e., bits equal to 1), the corresponding
 bits in the snmpTargetAddrTAddress value must match the bits in a
 transport address. If all such bits match, the transport address is
 matched by that snmpTargetAddrTable entry. Otherwise, the transport
 address is not matched.
 The maximum message size value, snmpTargetAddrMMS, is used to
 determine the maximum message size acceptable to another SNMP entity
 when the value cannot be determined from the protocol.
SNMP-COMMUNITY-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN
IMPORTS
 IpAddress,
 MODULE-IDENTITY,
 OBJECT-TYPE,
 Integer32,
 snmpModules
 FROM SNMPv2-SMI
 RowStatus,
 StorageType
 FROM SNMPv2-TC
 SnmpAdminString,
 SnmpEngineID
 FROM SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB
 SnmpTagValue,
 snmpTargetAddrEntry
 FROM SNMP-TARGET-MIB
 MODULE-COMPLIANCE,
 OBJECT-GROUP
 FROM SNMPv2-CONF;
snmpCommunityMIB MODULE-IDENTITY
 LAST-UPDATED "200003060000Z" -- 6 Mar 2000, midnight
 ORGANIZATION "SNMPv3 Working Group"
 CONTACT-INFO "WG-email: snmpv3@lists.tislabs.com
 Subscribe: majordomo@lists.tislabs.com
 In msg body: subscribe snmpv3
 Chair: Russ Mundy
 TIS Labs at Network Associates
 Postal: 3060 Washington Rd
 Glenwood MD 21738
 USA
 Email: mundy@tislabs.com
 Phone: +1-301-854-6889
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 30]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
 Co-editor: Rob Frye
 CoSine Communications
 Postal: 1200 Bridge Parkway
 Redwood City, CA 94065
 USA
 E-mail: rfrye@cosinecom.com
 Phone: +1 703 725 1130
 Co-editor: David B. Levi
 Nortel Networks
 Postal: 3505 Kesterwood Drive
 Knoxville, TN 37918
 E-mail: dlevi@nortelnetworks.com
 Phone: +1 423 686 0432
 Co-editor: Shawn A. Routhier
 Integrated Systems Inc.
 Postal: 333 North Ave 4th Floor
 Wakefield, MA 01880
 E-mail: sar@epilogue.com
 Phone: +1 781 245 0804
 Co-editor: Bert Wijnen
 Lucent Technologies
 Postal: Schagen 33
 3461 GL Linschoten
 Netherlands
 Email: bwijnen@lucent.com
 Phone: +31-348-407-775
 "
 DESCRIPTION
 "This MIB module defines objects to help support coexistence
 between SNMPv1, SNMPv2c, and SNMPv3."
 REVISION "200003060000Z" -- 6 Mar 2000
 DESCRIPTION "This version published as RFC 2576."
 REVISION "199905130000Z" -- 13 May 1999
 DESCRIPTION "The Initial Revision"
 ::= { snmpModules 18 }
-- Administrative assignments ****************************************
snmpCommunityMIBObjects OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { snmpCommunityMIB 1 }
snmpCommunityMIBConformance OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { snmpCommunityMIB 2 }
--
-- The snmpCommunityTable contains a database of community strings.
-- This table provides mappings between community strings, and the
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 31]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
-- parameters required for View-based Access Control.
--
snmpCommunityTable OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF SnmpCommunityEntry
 MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The table of community strings configured in the SNMP
 engine's Local Configuration Datastore (LCD)."
 ::= { snmpCommunityMIBObjects 1 }
snmpCommunityEntry OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX SnmpCommunityEntry
 MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "Information about a particular community string."
 INDEX { IMPLIED snmpCommunityIndex }
 ::= { snmpCommunityTable 1 }
SnmpCommunityEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
 snmpCommunityIndex SnmpAdminString,
 snmpCommunityName OCTET STRING,
 snmpCommunitySecurityName SnmpAdminString,
 snmpCommunityContextEngineID SnmpEngineID,
 snmpCommunityContextName SnmpAdminString,
 snmpCommunityTransportTag SnmpTagValue,
 snmpCommunityStorageType StorageType,
 snmpCommunityStatus RowStatus
}
snmpCommunityIndex OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX SnmpAdminString (SIZE(1..32))
 MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The unique index value of a row in this table."
 ::= { snmpCommunityEntry 1 }
snmpCommunityName OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX OCTET STRING
 MAX-ACCESS read-create
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The community string for which a row in this table
 represents a configuration."
 ::= { snmpCommunityEntry 2 }
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 32]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
snmpCommunitySecurityName OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX SnmpAdminString (SIZE(1..32))
 MAX-ACCESS read-create
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "A human readable string representing the corresponding
 value of snmpCommunityName in a Security Model
 independent format."
 ::= { snmpCommunityEntry 3 }
snmpCommunityContextEngineID OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX SnmpEngineID
 MAX-ACCESS read-create
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The contextEngineID indicating the location of the
 context in which management information is accessed
 when using the community string specified by the
 corresponding instance of snmpCommunityName.
 The default value is the snmpEngineID of the entity in
 which this object is instantiated."
 ::= { snmpCommunityEntry 4 }
snmpCommunityContextName OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX SnmpAdminString (SIZE(0..32))
 MAX-ACCESS read-create
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The context in which management information is accessed
 when using the community string specified by the corresponding
 instance of snmpCommunityName."
 DEFVAL { ''H } -- the empty string
 ::= { snmpCommunityEntry 5 }
snmpCommunityTransportTag OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX SnmpTagValue
 MAX-ACCESS read-create
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "This object specifies a set of transport endpoints
 from which a command responder application will accept
 management requests. If a management request containing
 this community is received on a transport endpoint other
 than the transport endpoints identified by this object,
 the request is deemed unauthentic.
 The transports identified by this object are specified
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 33]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
 in the snmpTargetAddrTable. Entries in that table
 whose snmpTargetAddrTagList contains this tag value
 are identified.
 If the value of this object has zero-length, transport
 endpoints are not checked when authenticating messages
 containing this community string."
 DEFVAL { ''H } -- the empty string
 ::= { snmpCommunityEntry 6 }
snmpCommunityStorageType OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX StorageType
 MAX-ACCESS read-create
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The storage type for this conceptual row in the
 snmpCommunityTable. Conceptual rows having the value
 'permanent' need not allow write-access to any
 columnar object in the row."
 ::= { snmpCommunityEntry 7 }
snmpCommunityStatus OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX RowStatus
 MAX-ACCESS read-create
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The status of this conceptual row in the snmpCommunityTable.
 An entry in this table is not qualified for activation
 until instances of all corresponding columns have been
 initialized, either through default values, or through
 Set operations. The snmpCommunityName and
 snmpCommunitySecurityName objects must be explicitly set.
 There is no restriction on setting columns in this table
 when the value of snmpCommunityStatus is active(1)."
 ::= { snmpCommunityEntry 8 }
--
-- The snmpTargetAddrExtTable
--
snmpTargetAddrExtTable OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF SnmpTargetAddrExtEntry
 MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The table of mask and mms values associated with the
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 34]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
 snmpTargetAddrTable.
 The snmpTargetAddrExtTable augments the
 snmpTargetAddrTable with a transport address mask value
 and a maximum message size value. The transport address
 mask allows entries in the snmpTargetAddrTable to define
 a set of addresses instead of just a single address.
 The maximum message size value allows the maximum
 message size of another SNMP entity to be configured for
 use in SNMPv1 (and SNMPv2c) transactions, where the
 message format does not specify a maximum message size."
 ::= { snmpCommunityMIBObjects 2 }
snmpTargetAddrExtEntry OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX SnmpTargetAddrExtEntry
 MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "Information about a particular mask and mms value."
 AUGMENTS { snmpTargetAddrEntry }
 ::= { snmpTargetAddrExtTable 1 }
SnmpTargetAddrExtEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
 snmpTargetAddrTMask OCTET STRING,
 snmpTargetAddrMMS Integer32
}
snmpTargetAddrTMask OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (0..255))
 MAX-ACCESS read-create
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The mask value associated with an entry in the
 snmpTargetAddrTable. The value of this object must
 have the same length as the corresponding instance of
 snmpTargetAddrTAddress, or must have length 0. An
 attempt to set it to any other value will result in
 an inconsistentValue error.
 The value of this object allows an entry in the
 snmpTargetAddrTable to specify multiple addresses.
 The mask value is used to select which bits of
 a transport address must match bits of the corresponding
 instance of snmpTargetAddrTAddress, in order for the
 transport address to match a particular entry in the
 snmpTargetAddrTable. Bits which are 1 in the mask
 value indicate bits in the transport address which
 must match bits in the snmpTargetAddrTAddress value.
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 35]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
 Bits which are 0 in the mask indicate bits in the
 transport address which need not match. If the
 length of the mask is 0, the mask should be treated
 as if all its bits were 1 and its length were equal
 to the length of the corresponding value of
 snmpTargetAddrTable.
 This object may not be modified while the value of the
 corresponding instance of snmpTargetAddrRowStatus is
 active(1). An attempt to set this object in this case
 will result in an inconsistentValue error."
 DEFVAL { ''H }
 ::= { snmpTargetAddrExtEntry 1 }
snmpTargetAddrMMS OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX Integer32 (0|484..2147483647)
 MAX-ACCESS read-create
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The maximum message size value associated with an entry
 in the snmpTargetAddrTable."
 DEFVAL { 484 }
 ::= { snmpTargetAddrExtEntry 2 }
--
-- The snmpTrapAddress and snmpTrapCommunity objects are included
-- in notifications that are forwarded by a proxy, which were
-- originally received as SNMPv1 Trap messages.
--
snmpTrapAddress OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX IpAddress
 MAX-ACCESS accessible-for-notify
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The value of the agent-addr field of a Trap PDU which
 is forwarded by a proxy forwarder application using
 an SNMP version other than SNMPv1. The value of this
 object SHOULD contain the value of the agent-addr field
 from the original Trap PDU as generated by an SNMPv1
 agent."
 ::= { snmpCommunityMIBObjects 3 }
snmpTrapCommunity OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX OCTET STRING
 MAX-ACCESS accessible-for-notify
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 36]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
 "The value of the community string field of an SNMPv1
 message containing a Trap PDU which is forwarded by a
 a proxy forwarder application using an SNMP version
 other than SNMPv1. The value of this object SHOULD
 contain the value of the community string field from
 the original SNMPv1 message containing a Trap PDU as
 generated by an SNMPv1 agent."
 ::= { snmpCommunityMIBObjects 4 }
-- Conformance Information *******************************************
snmpCommunityMIBCompliances OBJECT IDENTIFIER
 ::= { snmpCommunityMIBConformance 1 }
snmpCommunityMIBGroups OBJECT IDENTIFIER
 ::= { snmpCommunityMIBConformance 2 }
-- Compliance statements
snmpCommunityMIBCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The compliance statement for SNMP engines which
 implement the SNMP-COMMUNITY-MIB."
 MODULE -- this module
 MANDATORY-GROUPS { snmpCommunityGroup }
 OBJECT snmpCommunityName
 MIN-ACCESS read-only
 DESCRIPTION "Write access is not required."
 OBJECT snmpCommunitySecurityName
 MIN-ACCESS read-only
 DESCRIPTION "Write access is not required."
 OBJECT snmpCommunityContextEngineID
 MIN-ACCESS read-only
 DESCRIPTION "Write access is not required."
 OBJECT snmpCommunityContextName
 MIN-ACCESS read-only
 DESCRIPTION "Write access is not required."
 OBJECT snmpCommunityTransportTag
 MIN-ACCESS read-only
 DESCRIPTION "Write access is not required."
 OBJECT snmpCommunityStorageType
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 37]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
 MIN-ACCESS read-only
 DESCRIPTION "Write access is not required."
 OBJECT snmpCommunityStatus
 MIN-ACCESS read-only
 DESCRIPTION "Write access is not required."
 ::= { snmpCommunityMIBCompliances 1 }
snmpProxyTrapForwardCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "The compliance statement for SNMP engines which
 contain a proxy forwarding application which is
 capable of forwarding SNMPv1 traps using SNMPv2c
 or SNMPv3."
 MODULE -- this module
 MANDATORY-GROUPS { snmpProxyTrapForwardGroup }
 ::= { snmpCommunityMIBCompliances 2 }
snmpCommunityGroup OBJECT-GROUP
 OBJECTS {
 snmpCommunityName,
 snmpCommunitySecurityName,
 snmpCommunityContextEngineID,
 snmpCommunityContextName,
 snmpCommunityTransportTag,
 snmpCommunityStorageType,
 snmpCommunityStatus,
 snmpTargetAddrTMask,
 snmpTargetAddrMMS
 }
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "A collection of objects providing for configuration
 of community strings for SNMPv1 (and SNMPv2c) usage."
 ::= { snmpCommunityMIBGroups 1 }
snmpProxyTrapForwardGroup OBJECT-GROUP
 OBJECTS {
 snmpTrapAddress,
 snmpTrapCommunity
 }
 STATUS current
 DESCRIPTION
 "Objects which are used by proxy forwarding applications
 when translating traps between SNMP versions. These are
 used to preserve SNMPv1-specific information when
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 38]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
 translating to SNMPv2c or SNMPv3."
 ::= { snmpCommunityMIBGroups 3 }
END
6. Intellectual Property
The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to pertain
to the implementation or use of the technology described in this
document or the extent to which any license under such rights might or
might not be available; neither does it represent that it has made any
effort to identify any such rights. Information on the IETF's
procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and standards-
related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of claims of
rights made available for publication and any assurances of licenses to
be made available, or the result of an attempt made to obtain a general
license or permission for the use of such proprietary rights by
implementors or users of this specification can be obtained from the
IETF Secretariat.
The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary rights
which may cover technology that may be required to practice this
standard. Please address the information to the IETF Executive
Director.
7. Acknowledgments
This document is the result of the efforts of the SNMPv3 Working Group.
The design of the SNMP-COMMUNITY-MIB incorporates work done by the
authors of SNMPv2*:
 Jeff Case (SNMP Research, Inc.)
 David Harrington (Cabletron Systems Inc.)
 David Levi (SNMP Research, Inc.)
 Brian O'Keefe (Hewlett Packard)
 Jon Saperia (IronBridge Networks, Inc.)
 Steve Waldbusser (International Network Services)
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 39]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
8. Security Considerations
 Although SNMPv1 and SNMPv2 do not provide any security, allowing
 community names to be mapped into securityName/contextName provides
 the ability to use view-based access control to limit the access of
 unsecured SNMPv1 and SNMPv2 operations. In fact, it is important for
 network administrators to make use of this capability in order to
 avoid unauthorized access to MIB data that would otherwise be secure.
 Further, the SNMP-COMMUNITY-MIB has the potential to expose community
 strings which provide access to more information than that which is
 available using the usual 'public' community string. For this
 reason, a security administrator may wish to limit accessibility to
 the SNMP-COMMUNITY-MIB, and in particular, to make it inaccessible
 when using the 'public' community string.
 When a proxy implementation translates messages between SNMPv1 (or
 SNMPv2c) and SNMPv3, there may be a loss of security. For example,
 an SNMPv3 message received using authentication and privacy which is
 subsequently forwarded using SNMPv1 will lose the security benefits
 of using authentication and privacy. Careful configuration of
 proxies is required to address such situations. One approach to deal
 with such situations might be to use an encrypted tunnel.
9. References
 [1] Rose, M. and K. McCloghrie, "Structure and Identification of
 Management Information for TCP/IP-based internets", STD 16, RFC
 1155, May 1990.
 [2] Case, J., Fedor, M., Schoffstall, M. and J. Davin, "Simple
 Network Management Protocol", STD 15, RFC 1157, May 1990.
 [3] McCloghrie, K. and M. Rose, Editors, "Concise MIB Definitions",
 STD 16, RFC 1212, March 1991.
 [4] Rose, M., "A Convention for Defining Traps for use with the
 SNMP", RFC 1215, March 1991.
 [5] McCloghrie, K. and M. Rose, "A Convention for Describing SNMP-
 based Agents", RFC 1303, February 1992.
 [6] Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M. and S.Waldbusser,
 "Introduction to Community-based SNMPv2", RFC 1901, January
 1996.
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 40]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
 [7] 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.
 [8] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., Schoenwaelder, J., Case, J., Rose,
 M. and S. Waldbusser, "Textual Conventions for SMIv2", STD 58,
 RFC 2579, April 1999.
 [9] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., Schoenwaelder, J., Case, J., Rose,
 M. and S. Waldbusser, "Conformance Statements for SMIv2", STD
 58, RFC 2580, April 1999.
 [10] 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.
 [11] 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.
 [12] Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser,
 "Management Information Base for Version 2 of the Simple Network
 Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1907, January 1996.
 [13] Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser,
 "Coexistence between Version 1 and Version 2 of the Internet-
 standard Network Management Framework", RFC 1908, January 1996.
 [14] Levi, D. and B. Wijnen, "Mapping SNMPv2 onto SNMPv1 within a
 bi-lingual SNMP agent", RFC 2089, January 1997.
 [15] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
 Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
 [16] Harrington, D. and B. Wijnen, "An Architecture for Describing
 SNMP Management Frameworks", RFC 2571, May 1999.
 [17] Case, J., Harrington, D. and B. Wijnen, "Message Processing and
 Dispatching for the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)",
 RFC 2572, May 1999.
 [18] Levi, D., Meyer, P. and B. Stewart, "SNMP Applications", RFC
 2573, May 1999.
 [19] Blumenthal, U. and Wijnen, B., "The User-Based Security Model
 for Version 3 of the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)",
 RFC 2574, May 1999.
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 41]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
 [20] Wijnen, B., Presuhn, R. and K. McCloghrie, "View-based Access
 Control Model for the Simple Network Management Protocol
 (SNMP)", RFC 2575, May 1999.
10. Editor's Addresses
 Rob Frye
 CoSine Communications
 1200 Bridge Parkway
 Redwood City, CA 94065
 U.S.A.
 Phone: +1 703 725 1130
 EMail: rfrye@cosinecom.com
 David B. Levi
 Nortel Networks
 3505 Kesterwood Drive
 Knoxville, TN 37918
 U.S.A.
 Phone: +1 423 686 0432
 EMail: dlevi@nortelnetworks.com
 Shawn A. Routhier
 Integrated Systems Inc.
 333 North Ave 4th Floor
 Wakefield MA 01880
 U.S.A.
 Phone: + 1 781 245 0804
 EMail: sar@epilogue.com
 Bert Wijnen
 Lucent Technologies
 Schagen 33
 3461 GL Linschoten
 Netherlands
 Phone: +31 348 407-775
 EMail: wijnen@lucent.com
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 42]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
A. Changes From RFC1908 
 - Editorial changes to comply with current RFC requirements.
 - Added/updated copyright statements.
 - Added Intellectual Property section.
 - Replaced old introduction with complete new introduction/overview.
 - Added content for the Security Considerations Section.
 - Updated References to current documents.
 - Updated text to use current SNMP terminology.
 - Added coexistence for/with SNMPv3.
 - Added description for SNMPv1 and SNMPv2c Message Processing
 Models and SNMPv1 and SNMPv2c Community-based Security
 Models.
 - Added snmpCommunityMIB so that SNMPv1 and SNMPv2 community
 strings can be mapped into the SNMP Version Independent
 paramaters which can then be used for access control using the
 standard SNMPv3 View-based Access Control Model and the
 snmpVacmMIB.
 - Added two MIB objects such that when an SNMPv1 notification
 (trap) must be converted into an SNMPv2 notification we add
 those two objects in order to preserve information about the
 address and community of the originating SNMPv1 agent.
 - Included (and extended) from RFC2089 the SNMPv2 to SNMPv1
 mapping within a multi-lingual SNMP Engine.
 - Use keywords from RFC 2119 to describe requirements for
 compliance.
 - Changed/added some rules for converting a MIB module from
 SMIv1 to SMIv2.
 - Extended and improved the description of Proxy Forwarder
 behaviour when multiple SNMP versions are involved.
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 43]

RFC 2576 Coexistence between SNMP versions March 2000
Full Copyright Statement
 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000). 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
 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.
Acknowledgement
 Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
 Internet Society.
Frye, et al. Standards Track [Page 44]

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