RFC 1473 - The Definitions of Managed Objects for the IP Network Control Protocol of the Point-to-Point Protocol

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Network Working Group F. Kastenholz
Request for Comments: 1473 FTP Software, Inc.
 June 1993
 The Definitions of Managed Objects for
 the IP Network Control Protocol of
 the Point-to-Point Protocol
Status of this Memo
 This RFC specifies an IAB standards track protocol for the Internet
 community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.
 Please refer to the current edition of the "IAB Official Protocol
 Standards" for the standardization state and status of this protocol.
 Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
Abstract
 This memo defines a portion of the Management Information Base (MIB)
 for use with network management protocols in TCP/IP-based internets.
 In particular, it describes managed objects used for managing the IP
 Network Control Protocol on subnetwork interfaces using the family of
 Point-to-Point Protocols [8, 9, 10, 11, & 12].
Table of Contents
 1. The Network Management Framework ...................... 1
 2. Objects ............................................... 2
 2.1 Format of Definitions ................................ 2
 3. Overview .............................................. 2
 3.1 Object Selection Criteria ............................ 2
 3.2 Structure of the PPP ................................. 2
 3.3 MIB Groups ........................................... 3
 4. Definitions ........................................... 4
 5. Acknowledgements ...................................... 8
 6. Security Considerations ............................... 8
 7. References ............................................ 8
 8. Author's Address ...................................... 9
1. The Network Management Framework
 The Internet-standard Network Management Framework consists of three
 components. They are:
 STD 16/RFC 1155 which defines the SMI, the mechanisms used for
 describing and naming objects for the purpose of management. STD
 16/RFC 1212 defines a more concise description mechanism, which is
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RFC 1473 PPP/IP MIB June 1993
 wholly consistent with the SMI.
 STD 17/RFC 1213 which defines MIB-II, the core set of managed
 objects for the Internet suite of protocols.
 STD 15/RFC 1157 which defines the SNMP, the protocol used for
 network access to managed objects.
 The Framework permits new objects to be defined for the purpose of
 experimentation and evaluation.
2. Objects
 Managed objects are accessed via a virtual information store, termed
 the Management Information Base or MIB. Objects in the MIB are
 defined using the subset of Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1) [3]
 defined in the SMI. In particular, each object type is named by an
 OBJECT IDENTIFIER, an administratively assigned name. The object
 type together with an object instance serves to uniquely identify a
 specific instantiation of the object. For human convenience, we
 often use a textual string, termed the descriptor, to refer to the
 object type.
2.1. Format of Definitions
 Section 4 contains the specification of all object types contained in
 this MIB module. The object types are defined using the conventions
 defined in the SMI, as amended by the extensions specified in [5,6].
3. Overview
3.1. Object Selection Criteria
 To be consistent with IAB directives and good engineering practice,
 an explicit attempt was made to keep this MIB as simple as possible.
 This was accomplished by applying the following criteria to objects
 proposed for inclusion:
 (1) Require objects be essential for either fault or
 configuration management. In particular, objects for
 which the sole purpose was to debug implementations were
 explicitly excluded from the MIB.
 (2) Consider evidence of current use and/or utility.
 (3) Limit the total number of objects.
 (4) Exclude objects which are simply derivable from others in
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RFC 1473 PPP/IP MIB June 1993
 this or other MIBs.
3.2. Structure of the PPP
 This section describes the basic model of PPP used in developing the
 PPP MIB. This information should be useful to the implementor in
 understanding some of the basic design decisions of the MIB.
 The PPP is not one single protocol but a large family of protocols.
 Each of these is, in itself, a fairly complex protocol. The PPP
 protocols may be divided into three rough categories:
 Control Protocols
 The Control Protocols are used to control the operation of the
 PPP. The Control Protocols include the Link Control Protocol
 (LCP), the Password Authentication Protocol (PAP), the Link
 Quality Report (LQR), and the Challenge Handshake Authentication
 Protocol (CHAP).
 Network Protocols
 The Network Protocols are used to move the network traffic over
 the PPP interface. A Network Protocol encapsulates the datagrams
 of a specific higher-layer protocol that is using the PPP as a
 data link. Note that within the context of PPP, the term "Network
 Protocol" does not imply an OSI Layer-3 protocol; for instance,
 there is a Bridging network protocol.
 Network Control Protocols (NCPs)
 The NCPs are used to control the operation of the Network
 Protocols. Generally, each Network Protocol has its own Network
 Control Protocol; thus, the IP Network Protocol has its IP Control
 Protocol, the Bridging Network Protocol has its Bridging Network
 Control Protocol and so on.
 This document specifies the objects used in managing one of these
 protocols, namely the IP Network Control Protocol.
3.3. MIB Groups
 Objects in this MIB are arranged into several MIB groups. Each group
 is organized as a set of related objects.
 These groups are the basic unit of conformance: if the semantics of a
 group are applicable to an implementation then all objects in the
 group must be implemented.
 The PPP MIB is organized into several MIB Groups, including, but not
 limited to, the following groups:
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RFC 1473 PPP/IP MIB June 1993
 o The PPP Link Group
 o The PPP LQR Group
 o The PPP LQR Extensions Group
 o The PPP IP Group
 o The PPP Bridge Group
 o The PPP Security Group
 This document specifies the following group:
 The PPP IP Group
 The PPP IP Group contains configuration, status, and control
 variables that apply to the operation of IP over PPP.
 Implementation of this group is mandatory for all implementations
 of PPP that support IP over PPP.
4. Definitions
 PPP-IP-NCP-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN
 IMPORTS
 Counter
 FROM RFC1155-SMI
 ifIndex
 FROM RFC1213-MIB
 OBJECT-TYPE
 FROM RFC-1212
 ppp
 FROM PPP-LCP-MIB;
 -- The PPP IP Group.
 -- Implementation of this group is mandatory for all
 -- PPP implementations that support operating IP over PPP.
 pppIp OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ppp 3 }
 pppIpTable OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF PppIpEntry
 ACCESS not-accessible
 STATUS mandatory
 DESCRIPTION
 "Table containing the IP parameters and
 statistics for the local PPP entity."
 ::= { pppIp 1 }
 pppIpEntry OBJECT-TYPE
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 SYNTAX PppIpEntry
 ACCESS not-accessible
 STATUS mandatory
 DESCRIPTION
 "IPCP status information for a particular PPP
 link."
 INDEX { ifIndex }
 ::= { pppIpTable 1 }
 PppIpEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
 pppIpOperStatus
 INTEGER,
 pppIpLocalToRemoteCompressionProtocol
 INTEGER,
 pppIpRemoteToLocalCompressionProtocol
 INTEGER,
 pppIpRemoteMaxSlotId
 INTEGER,
 pppIpLocalMaxSlotId
 INTEGER
 }
 -- The following object reflect the values of the option
 -- parameters used in the PPP IP Control Protocol
 -- pppIpLocalToRemoteCompressionProtocol
 -- pppIpRemoteToLocalCompressionProtocol
 -- pppIpRemoteMaxSlotId
 -- pppIpLocalMaxSlotId
 -- These values are not available until after the PPP Option
 -- negotiation has completed, which is indicated by the link
 -- reaching the open state (i.e., pppIpOperStatus is set to
 -- opened).
 --
 -- Therefore, when pppIpOperStatus is not opened
 -- the contents of these objects is undefined. The value
 -- returned when accessing the objects is an implementation
 -- dependent issue.
 pppIpOperStatus OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX INTEGER {opened(1), not-opened(2)}
 ACCESS read-only
 STATUS mandatory
 DESCRIPTION
 "The operational status of the IP network
 protocol. If the value of this object is up
 then the finite state machine for the IP
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RFC 1473 PPP/IP MIB June 1993
 network protocol has reached the Opened state."
 ::= { pppIpEntry 1 }
 pppIpLocalToRemoteCompressionProtocol OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX INTEGER {
 none(1),
 vj-tcp(2)
 }
 ACCESS read-only
 STATUS mandatory
 DESCRIPTION
 "The IP compression protocol that the local
 PPP-IP entity uses when sending packets to the
 remote PPP-IP entity. The value of this object
 is meaningful only when the link has reached
 the open state (pppIpOperStatus is opened)."
 ::= { pppIpEntry 2 }
 pppIpRemoteToLocalCompressionProtocol OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX INTEGER {
 none(1),
 vj-tcp(2)
 }
 ACCESS read-only
 STATUS mandatory
 DESCRIPTION
 "The IP compression protocol that the remote
 PPP-IP entity uses when sending packets to the
 local PPP-IP entity. The value of this object
 is meaningful only when the link has reached
 the open state (pppIpOperStatus is opened)."
 ::= { pppIpEntry 3 }
 pppIpRemoteMaxSlotId OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX INTEGER(0..255)
 ACCESS read-only
 STATUS mandatory
 DESCRIPTION
 "The Max-Slot-Id parameter that the remote node
 has advertised and that is in use on the link.
 If vj-tcp header compression is not in use on
 the link then the value of this object shall be
 0. The value of this object is meaningful only
 when the link has reached the open state
 (pppIpOperStatus is opened)."
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RFC 1473 PPP/IP MIB June 1993
 ::= { pppIpEntry 4 }
 pppIpLocalMaxSlotId OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX INTEGER(0..255)
 ACCESS read-only
 STATUS mandatory
 DESCRIPTION
 "The Max-Slot-Id parameter that the local node
 has advertised and that is in use on the link.
 If vj-tcp header compression is not in use on
 the link then the value of this object shall be
 0. The value of this object is meaningful only
 when the link has reached the open state
 (pppIpOperStatus is opened)."
 ::= { pppIpEntry 5 }
 --
 -- The PPP IP Configuration table.
 -- This is a separate table in order to facilitate
 -- placing these variables in a separate MIB view.
 --
 pppIpConfigTable OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF PppIpConfigEntry
 ACCESS not-accessible
 STATUS mandatory
 DESCRIPTION
 "Table containing configuration variables for
 the IPCP for the local PPP entity."
 ::= { pppIp 2 }
 pppIpConfigEntry OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX PppIpConfigEntry
 ACCESS not-accessible
 STATUS mandatory
 DESCRIPTION
 "IPCP information for a particular PPP link."
 INDEX { ifIndex }
 ::= { pppIpConfigTable 1 }
 PppIpConfigEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
 pppIpConfigAdminStatus
 INTEGER,
 pppIpConfigCompression
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RFC 1473 PPP/IP MIB June 1993
 INTEGER
 }
 pppIpConfigAdminStatus OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX INTEGER {open(1), close(2)}
 ACCESS read-write
 STATUS mandatory
 DESCRIPTION
 "The immediate desired status of the IP network
 protocol. Setting this object to open will
 inject an administrative open event into the IP
 network protocol's finite state machine.
 Setting this object to close will inject an
 administrative close event into the IP network
 protocol's finite state machine."
 ::= { pppIpConfigEntry 1 }
 pppIpConfigCompression OBJECT-TYPE
 SYNTAX INTEGER {
 none(1),
 vj-tcp(2)
 }
 ACCESS read-write
 STATUS mandatory
 DESCRIPTION
 "If none(1) then the local node will not
 attempt to negotiate any IP Compression option.
 Otherwise, the local node will attempt to
 negotiate compression mode indicated by the
 enumerated value. Changing this object will
 have effect when the link is next restarted."
 REFERENCE
 "Section 4.0, Van Jacobson TCP/IP Header
 Compression of RFC1332."
 DEFVAL { none }
 ::= { pppIpConfigEntry 2 }
 END
5. Acknowledgements
 This document was produced by the PPP working group. In addition to
 the working group, the author wishes to thank the following
 individuals for their comments and contributions:
 Bill Simpson -- Daydreamer
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RFC 1473 PPP/IP MIB June 1993
 Glenn McGregor -- Merit
 Jesse Walker -- DEC
 Chris Gunner -- DEC
6. Security Considerations
 The PPP MIB affords the network operator the ability to configure and
 control the PPP links of a particular system, including the PPP
 authentication protocols. This represents a security risk.
 These risks are addressed in the following manners:
 (1) All variables which represent a significant security risk
 are placed in separate, optional, MIB Groups. As the MIB
 Group is the quantum of implementation within a MIB, the
 implementor of the MIB may elect not to implement these
 groups.
 (2) The implementor may choose to implement the variables
 which present a security risk so that they may not be
 written, i.e., the variables are READ-ONLY. This method
 still presents a security risk, and is not recommended,
 in that the variables, specifically the PPP
 Authentication Protocols' variables, may be easily read.
 (3) Using SNMPv2, the operator can place the variables into
 MIB views which are protected in that the parties which
 have access to those MIB views use authentication and
 privacy protocols, or the operator may elect to make
 these views not accessible to any party. In order to
 facilitate this placement, all security-related variables
 are placed in separate MIB Tables. This eases the
 identification of the necessary MIB View Subtree.
7. References
 [1] Rose M., and K. McCloghrie, "Structure and Identification of
 Management Information for TCP/IP-based internets", STD 16, RFC
 1155, Performance Systems International, Hughes LAN Systems, May
 1990.
 [2] McCloghrie K., and M. Rose, Editors, "Management Information Base
 for Network Management of TCP/IP-based internets", STD 17, RFC
 1213, Performance Systems International, March 1991.
 [3] Information processing systems - Open Systems Interconnection -
 Specification of Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1),
 International Organization for Standardization, International
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RFC 1473 PPP/IP MIB June 1993
 Standard 8824, December 1987.
 [4] Information processing systems - Open Systems Interconnection -
 Specification of Basic Encoding Rules for Abstract Notation One
 (ASN.1), International Organization for Standardization,
 International Standard 8825, December 1987.
 [5] Rose, M., and K. McCloghrie, Editors, "Concise MIB Definitions",
 STD 16, RFC 1212, Performance Systems International, Hughes LAN
 Systems, March 1991.
 [6] Rose, M., Editor, "A Convention for Defining Traps for use with
 the SNMP", RFC 1215, Performance Systems International, March
 1991.
 [7] McCloghrie, K., "Extensions to the Generic-Interface MIB", RFC
 1229, Hughes LAN Systems, Inc., May 1991.
 [8] Simpson, W., "The Point-to-Point Protocol for the Transmission of
 Multi-protocol Datagrams over Point-to-Point Links, RFC 1331,
 Daydreamer, May 1992.
 [9] McGregor, G., "The PPP Internet Protocol Control Protocol", RFC
 1332, Merit, May 1992.
 [10] Baker, F., "Point-to-Point Protocol Extensions for Bridging", RFC
 1220, ACC, April 1991.
 [11] Lloyd, B., and W. Simpson, "PPP Authentication Protocols", RFC
 1334, L&A, Daydreamer, October 1992.
 [12] Simpson, W., "PPP Link Quality Monitoring", RFC 1333, Daydreamer,
 May 1992.
8. Author's Address
 Frank Kastenholz
 FTP Software, Inc.
 2 High Street
 North Andover, Mass 01845 USA
 Phone: (508) 685-4000
 EMail: kasten@ftp.com
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