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Obsoleted by:1470 INFORMATIONAL
          Network Working Group                    R. Stine, Editor          Request for Comments: 1147                   SPARTA, Inc.          FYI: 2                                         April 1990FYI on a Network Management Tool Catalog:Tools for Monitoring and Debugging TCP/IP Internetsand Interconnected Devices                              Status of this Memo                    The goal of this FYI memo is to provide practical informa-          tion to site administrators and network managers.  This memo          provides information for the Internet community.  It does          not specify any standard.  It is not a statement of IAB pol-          icy or recommendations.  Comments, critiques, and new or          updated tool descriptions are welcome, and should be sent to          Robert Stine, at stine@sparta.com, or to the NOCTools work-          ing group, at noctools@merit.edu.                    Distribution of this memo is unlimited.1. Introduction                    This catalog contains descriptions of several tools avail-          able to assist network managers in debugging and maintaining          TCP/IP internets and interconnected communications          resources.  Entries in the catalog tell what a tool does,          how it works, and how it can be obtained.                    The NOCTools Working Group of the Internet Engineering Task          Force (IETF) compiled this catalog in 1989.  Future editions          will be produced as IETF members become aware of tools that          should be included, and of deficiencies or inaccuracies.          Developing an edition oriented to the OSI protocol suite is          also contemplated.                    The tools described in this catalog are in no way endorsed          by the IETF.  For the most part, we have neither evaluated          the tools in this catalog, nor validated their descriptions.          Most of the descriptions of commercial tools have been pro-          vided by vendors.  Caveat Emptor.1.1 Purpose                    The practice of re-inventing the wheel seems endemic to the          field of data communications.  The primary goal of thisIETF NOCTools Working Group                         [Page 1]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                              document is to fight that tendency in a small but useful          way.  By listing the capabilities of some of the available          network management tools, we hope to pool and share          knowledge and experience.  Another goal of this catalog is          to show those new in the field what can be done to manage          internet sites.  A network management tutorial at the end of          the document is of further assistance in this area.          Finally, by omission, this catalog points out the network          management tools that are needed, but do not yet exist.                    There are other sources of information on available network          management tools.  Both the DDN Protocol Implementation and          Vendors Guide and the DATAPRO series on data communications          and LANs are particularly comprehensive and informative.          The DDN Protocol Implementation and Vendors Guide addresses          a wide range of internet management topics, including          evaluations of protocol implementations and network          analyzers.* The DATAPRO volumes, though expensive (check          your local university or technical libraries!), are good          surveys of available commercial products for network manage-          ment.  DATAPRO also includes tutorials, market analyses,          product evaluations, and predictions on technology trends.1.2 Scope                    The tools described in this document are used for managing          the network resources, LANs, and devices that are commonly          interconnected by TCP/IP internets.  This document is not,          however, a "how to" manual on network management.  While it          includes a tutorial, the coverage is much too brief and gen-          eral to serve as a sole source: a great deal of further          study is required of aspiring network managers.  Neither is          this catalog is an operations manual for particular tools.          Each individual tool entry is brief, and emphasizes the uses          to which a tool can be put.  A tool's documentation, which          in some cases runs to hundreds of pages, should be consulted          for assistance in its installation and operation.1.3 OverviewSection 1 describes the purpose, scope, and organization of          this catalog.Section 2 lists and explains the standard keywords used in          _________________________          * Instructions for obtaining the DDN Protocol Guide are          given inSection 7 of the appendix.IETF NOCTools Working Group                         [Page 2]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                              the tool descriptions.  The keywords can be used as a sub-          ject index into the catalog.Section 3, the main body of the catalog, contains the          entries describing network management tools.  The tool          entries inSection 3 are presented in alphabetical order, by          tool name.  The tool descriptions all follow a standard for-          mat, described in the introduction toSection 3.                    Following the catalog, there is an appendix that contains a          tutorial on the goals and practice of network management.1.4 Acknowledgements                    The compilation and editing of this catalog was sponsored by          the Defense Communications Engineering Center (DCEC), con-          tract DCA100-89-C-0001.  The effort grew out of an initial          task to survey current internet management tools.  The cata-          log is largely, however, the result of volunteer labor on          the part of the NOCTools Working Group, the User Services          Working Group, and many others.  Without these volunteer          contributions, the catalog would not exist.  The support          from the Internet community for this endeavor has been          extremely gratifying.                    Several individuals made especially notable contributions.          Mike Patton, Paul Holbrook, Mark Fedor and Gary Malkin were          particularly helpful in composition and editorial review,          while Dave Crocker provided essential guidance and          encouragement.  Bob Enger was active from the first with the          gut work of chairing the Working Group and building the          catalog.  Phill Gross helped to christen the NOCTools Work-          ing Group, to define its scope and goals, and to establish          its role in the IETF.  Mike Little contributed the formative          idea of enhancing and publicizing the management tool survey          through IETF participation.                    Responsibility for any deficiencies and errors remains, of          course, with the editor.IETF NOCTools Working Group                         [Page 3]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 19902. Keywords                    This catalog uses "keywords" for terse characterizations of          the tools.  Keywords are abbreviated attributes of a tool or          its use.  To allow cross-comparison of tools, uniform key-          word definitions have been developed, and are given below.          Following the definitions, there is an index of catalog          entries by keyword.2.1 Keyword Definitions                    The keywords are always listed in a prefined order, sorted          first by the general category into which they fall, and then          alphabetically.  The categories that have been defined for          management tool keywords are:                         o+    the general management area to which a tool                    relates or a tool's functional role;                         o+    the network resources or components that are                    managed;                         o+    the mechanisms or methods a tool uses to perform                    its functions;                         o+    the operating system and hardware environment of a                    tool; and                         o+    the characteristics of a tool as a hardware pro-                    duct or software release.                              The keywords used to describe the general management area or          functional role of a tool are:                    Alarm               a reporting/logging tool that can trigger  on  specific               events within a network.                    Analyzer               a traffic monitor that reconstructs and interprets pro-               tocol messages that span several packets.                    Benchmark               a tool used to evaluate the performance of network com-               ponents.IETF NOCTools Working Group                         [Page 4]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                        Control               a tool that can change the state or status of a  remote               network resource.                    Debugger               a tool that by generating arbitrary packets  and  moni-               toring traffic, can drive a remote network component to               various states and record its responses.                    Generator               a traffic generation tool.                    Manager               a distributed network management system or system  com-               ponent.                    Map               a tool that can discover and report a system's topology               or configuration.                    Reference               a tool for documenting MIB structure or  system  confi-               guration.                    Routing               a packet route discovery tool.                    Security               a tool for analyzing or reducing threats to security.                    Status               a tool that remotely tracks the status of network  com-               ponents.                    Traffic               a tool that monitors packet flow.                              The keywords used to identify the network resources or com-          ponents that a tool manages are:                    Bridge               a tool for controlling or monitoring LAN bridges.IETF NOCTools Working Group                         [Page 5]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                        CHAOS               a tool for controlling or monitoring implementations of               the CHAOS protocol suite or network components that use               it.                    DECnet               a tool for controlling or monitoring implementations of               the  DECnet  protocol  suite or network components that               use it.                    DNS               a Domain Name System debugging tool.                    Ethernet               a tool for controlling or monitoring network components               on ethernet LANs.                    FDDI               a tool for controlling or monitoring network components               on FDDI LANs or WANs.                    IP               a tool for controlling or monitoring implementations of               the  TCP/IP  protocol  suite or network components that               use it.                    OSI               a tool for controlling or monitoring implementations of               the  OSI  protocol suite or network components that use               it.                    NFS               a Network File System debugging tool.                    Ring               a tool for controlling or monitoring network components               on Token Ring LANs.                    SMTP               an SMTP debugging tool.                    Star               a tool for controlling or monitoring network components               on StarLANs.                              The keywords used to describe a tool's mechanism are:IETF NOCTools Working Group                         [Page 6]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                        Curses               a tool that uses the "curses" tty interface package.                    Eavesdrop               a tool  that  silently  monitors  communications  media               (e.g., by putting an ethernet interface into "promiscu-               ous" mode).                    NMS               the tool is a component of or queries a Network Manage-               ment System.                    Ping               a tool that sends packet probes such as ICMP echo  mes-               sages;  to  help  distinguish tools, we do not consider               NMS queries or protocol spoofing (see below) as probes.                    Proprietary               a distributed tool that uses proprietary communications               techniques to link its components.                    SNMP               a network management system or component based on SNMP,               the Simple Network Management Protocol.                    Spoof               a tool that tests operation of remote protocol  modules               by peer-level message exchange.                    X               a tool that uses X-Windows.                              The keywords used to describe a tool's operating environment          are:                    DOS               a tool that runs under MS-DOS.                    HP               a tool that runs on Hewlett-Packard systems.                    Macintosh               a tool that runs on Macintosh personal computers.IETF NOCTools Working Group                         [Page 7]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                        Standalone               an integrated hardware/software tool that requires only               a network interface for operation.                    UNIX               a tool that runs under 4.xBSD UNIX or related OS.                    VMS               a tool that runs under DEC's VMS operating system.                              The keywords used to describe a tool's characteristics as a          hardware or software acquisition are:                    Free               a tool is available at no charge, though other restric-               tions may apply (tools that are part of an OS distribu-               tion but not otherwise  available  are  not  listed  as               "free").                    Library               a tool packaged with either an Application  Programming               Interface (API) or object-level subroutines that may be               loaded with programs.                    Sourcelib               a collection of source code  (subroutines)  upon  which               developers may construct other tools.IETF NOCTools Working Group                         [Page 8]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 19902.2 Tools Indexed by Keywords                    Following is an index of catalog entries sorted by keyword.          This index can be used to locate the tools with a particular          attribute: tools are listed under each keyword that charac-          terizes them.  The keywords and the subordinate lists of          tools under them are in alphabetical order.                    In the interest of brevity, some liberties have been taken          with tool names.  Capitalization of the names is as speci-          fied by the tool developers or distributers.  Note that          parenthetical roman numerals following a tool's name are not          actually part of the name.  The use of roman numerals to          differentiate tools with the same name is explained in the          introduction ofSection 3.                    alarm                           bridge               CMIP Library                    ConnectVIEW               EtherMeter                      decaddrs               LanProbe                        NMC               LANWatch                        proxyd               NETMON (III)                    Snmp Libraries               osilog                          snmpd               SERAG               sma               Snmp Libraries             CHAOS               snmptrapd                       LANWatch               SpiderMonitor                   map               Unisys NCC               WIN/MGT Station               xnetmon (I)                control               XNETMON (II)                    CMIP Library                                               ConnectVIEW                                               NETMON (III)          analyzer                             NMC               LANWatch                        proxyd               Sniffer                         Snmp Libraries               SpiderMonitor                   snmpset                                               TokenVIEW                                               Unisys NCC          benchmark                            WIN/MGT Station               hammer                          XNETMON (II)               nhfsstone               SPIMS               spray               TTCP               Unisys NCCIETF NOCTools Working Group                         [Page 9]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                        curses                          DOS               Internet Rover                  Comp. Security Checklist               net_monitor                     ConnectVIEW               nfswatch                        hammer               osimon                          hopcheck               snmpperfmon                     LAN Patrol                                               LANWatch                                               netmon (I)          debugger                             NETMON (III)               SPIMS                           netwatch                                               OverVIEW                                               ping          DECnet                               Snmp Libraries               decaddrs                        snmpd (II)               LANWatch                        TokenVIEW               NETMON (III)                    XNETMON (II)               net_monitor                     xnetperfmon               NMC               Sniffer               Snmp Libraries             eavesdrop               SpiderMonitor                   ENTM               XNETMON (II)                    etherfind               xnetperfmon                     EtherView                                               LAN Patrol                                               LanProbe          DNS                                  LANWatch               DiG                             NETMON (II)               LANWatch                        netwatch               netmon (I)                      nfswatch               nslookup                        NNStat                                               OSITRACE                                               Sniffer                                               SpiderMonitor                                               Tcplogger                                               TRPTIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 10]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                        ethernet                        free               arp                             arp               ConnectVIEW                     CMIP Library               ENTM                            CMU SNMP               etherfind                       DiG               etherhostprobe                  ENTM               EtherMeter                      etherhostprobe               EtherView                       hammer               LAN Patrol                      hopcheck               LanProbe                        HyperMIB               LANWatch                        Internet Rover               map                             map               NETMON (III)                    netmon (I)               netwatch                        NETMON (II)               Network Integrator              netstat               nfswatch                        netwatch               NMC                             net_monitor               NNStat                          nfswatch               proxyd                          nhfsstone               SERAG                           NNStat               Sniffer                         NPRV               Snmp Libraries                  nslookup               snmpd (II)                      osilog               SpiderMonitor                   osimic               tcpdump                         osimon               Unisys NCC                      OSITRACE               WIN/MGT Station                 ping               XNETMON (II)                    query               xnetperfmon                     sma                                               SNMP Kit                                               tcpdump          FDDI                                 tcplogger               Unisys NCC                      traceroute                                               TRPT                                               TTCP                                                              generator                                               hammer                                               nhfsstone                                               ping                                               Sniffer                                               SpiderMonitor                                               spray                                               TTCP                                               Unisys NCCIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 11]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                        HP                              IP               xup                             arp                                               CMU SNMP                                               Dual Manager                                               ENTM                                               etherfind                                               etherhostprobe                                               EtherView                                               getone                                               hammer                                               hopcheck                                               Internet Rover                                               LANWatch                                               map                                               Netlabs CMOT Agent                                               Netlabs SNMP Agent                                               netmon (I)                                               NETMON (II)                                               NETMON (III)                                               netstat                                               netwatch                                               net_monitor                                               nfswatch                                               NMC                                               NNStat                                               NPRV                                               OverVIEW                                               ping                                               proxyd                                               query                                               SERAG                                               Sniffer                                               SNMP Kit                                               Snmp Libraries                                               snmpask                                               snmpd (I)                                               snmpd (II)                                               snmplookup                                               snmpperfmon                                               snmppoll                                               snmpquery                                               snmproute                                               snmpset                                               snmpsrc                                               snmpstat                                               snmptrapd                                               snmpwatchIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 12]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                   snmpxbar               snmpxconn                  manager               snmpxmon                        CMIP Library               snmpxperf                       CMU SNMP               snmpxperfmon                    ConnectVIEW               snmpxrtmetric                   decaddrs               SpiderMonitor                   Dual Manager               SPIMS                           getone               spray                           LanProbe               Tcpdump                         map               Tcplogger                       Netlabs CMOT Agent               Traceroute                      Netlabs SNMP Agent               TRPT                            NETMON (III)               TTCP                            NMC               Unisys NCC                      NNStat               WIN/MGT Station                 osilog               xnetmon (I)                     osimic               XNETMON (II)                    osimon               xnetperfmon                     OverVIEW                                               sma                                               SNMP Kit          library                              Snmp Libraries               CMIP Library                    snmpask               Dual Manager                    snmpd (I)               LANWatch                        snmpd (II)               proxyd                          snmplookup               WIN/MGT Station                 snmpperfmon                                               snmppoll                                               snmpquery          Macintosh                            snmproute               HyperMIB                        snmpsrc                                               snmpset                                               snmpstat                                               snmptrapd                                               snmpwatch                                               snmpxbar                                               snmpxconn                                               snmpxmon                                               snmpxperf                                               snmpxperfmon                                               snmpxrtmetric                                               TokenVIEW                                               Unisys NCC                                               WIN/MGT Station                                               xnetmon (I)                                               XNETMON (II)                                               xnetperfmonIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 13]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                        map                             NMS               decaddrs                        CMU SNMP               etherhostprobe                  ConnectVIEW               EtherMeter                      decaddrs               LanProbe                        Dual Manager               map                             EtherMeter               NETMON (III)                    getone               Network Integrator              LanProbe               NPRV                            map               Snmp Libraries                  Netlabs CMOT Agent               snmpxconn                       Netlabs SNMP Agent               snmpxmon                        NETMON (III)               Unisys NCC                      NMC               xnetmon (I)                     NNStat               XNETMON (II)                    OverVIEW                                               proxyd                                               SERAG          NFS                                  SNMP Kit               etherfind                       Snmp Libraries               EtherView                       snmpask               nfswatch                        snmpd (I)               nhfsstone                       snmpd (II)               Sniffer                         snmplookup               tcpdump                         snmpperfmon                                               snmppoll                                               snmpquery                                               snmproute                                               snmpset                                               snmpsrc                                               snmpstat                                               snmptrapd                                               snmpwatch                                               snmpxbar                                               snmpxconn                                               snmpxmon                                               snmpxperf                                               snmpxperfmon                                               snmpxrtmetric                                               TokenVIEW                                               Unisys NCC                                               WIN/MGT Station                                               xnetmon (I)                                               XNETMON (II)                                               xnetperfmonIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 14]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                        OSI                             ring               CMIP Library                    ConnectVIEW               Dual Manager                    LANWatch               LANWatch                        map               Netlabs CMOT Agent              NETMON (III)               NETMON (III)                    netwatch               osilog                          proxyd               osimic                          Sniffer               osimon                          Snmp Libraries               OSITRACE                        snmpd (II)               sma                             TokenVIEW               Sniffer                         XNETMON (II)               Snmp Libraries                  xnetperfmon               SpiderMonitor               SPIMS               XNETMON (II)               routing               xnetperfmon                     arp                                               ConnectVIEW                                               decaddrs          ping                                 etherhostprobe               etherhostprobe                  getone               hopcheck                        hopcheck               Internet Rover                  NETMON (III)               map                             netstat               netmon (I)                      net_monitor               net_monitor                     NMC               NPRV                            NPRV               ping                            query               spray                           Snmp Libraries               traceroute                      snmproute               TTCP                            snmpsrc               Unisys NCC                      snmpxrtmetric               xup                             traceroute                                               WIN/MGT Station                                               XNETMON (II)          proprietary               ConnectVIEW               EtherMeter                 security               LanProbe                        Comp. Security Checklist               SERAG                           ConnectVIEW               TokenVIEW                       Dual Manager                                               LAN Patrol                                               SERAG          reference                            XNETMON (II)               HyperMIB               Unisys NCCIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 15]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                        SMTP                            sourcelib               Internet Rover                  CMIP Library               LANWatch                        CMU SNMP               mconnect                        HyperMIB               Sniffer                         Internet Rover                                               LANWatch                                               map          SNMP                                 NETMON (III)               CMU SNMP                        net_monitor               decaddrs                        proxyd               Dual Manager                    SNMP Kit               getone                          Snmp Libraries               map                             Snmpd (II)               Netlabs SNMP Agent              SpiderMonitor               NETMON (III)                    XNETMON (II)               NMC                             xnetperfmon               OverVIEW               proxyd               SNMP Kit                   spoof               Snmp Libraries                  DiG               snmpask                         Internet Rover               snmpd (I)                       mconnect               snmpd (II)                      nhfsstone               snmplookup                      nslookup               snmpperfmon                     query               snmppoll                        SPIMS               snmpquery               snmproute               snmpset                    standalone               snmpsrc                         EtherMeter               snmpstat                        Sniffer               snmptrapd                       SpiderMonitor               snmpwatch               snmpxbar               snmpxconn                  star               snmpxmon                        LAN Patrol               snmpxperf                       LANWatch               snmpxperfmon                    map               snmpxrtmetric                   NETMON (III)               Unisys NCC                      proxyd               WIN/MGT Station                 Sniffer               xnetmon (I)                     Snmp Libraries               XNETMON (II)                    snmpd (II)               xnetperfmon                     XNETMON (II)                                               xnetperfmonIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 16]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                        status                          traffic               CMIP Library                    ENTM               CMU SNMP                        etherfind               ConnectVIEW                     EtherMeter               DiG                             EtherView               Dual Manager                    LAN Patrol               getone                          LanProbe               Internet Rover                  LANWatch               LanProbe                        NETMON (II)               mconnect                        netwatch               Netlabs CMOT Agent              Network Integrator               Netlabs SNMP Agent              nfswatch               netmon (I)                      NMC               net_monitor                     NNStat               NMC                             osimon               NNStat                          OSITRACE               NPRV                            Sniffer               nslookup                        snmpxperfmon               osimic                          SpiderMonitor               osimon                          tcpdump               OverVIEW                        tcplogger               ping                            TRPT               proxyd                          Unisys NCC               sma                             WIN/MGT Station               SNMP Kit               Snmp Libraries               snmpask               snmpd (I)               snmpd (II)               snmplookup               snmpperfmon               snmppoll               snmpquery               snmpstat               snmpwatch               snmpxbar               snmpxconn               snmpxmon               snmpxperf               snmpxperfmon               TokenVIEW               Unisys NCC               WIN/MGT Station               xnetmon (I)               XNETMON (II)               xnetperfmon               xupIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 17]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                                                   snmpxbar          UNIX                                 snmpxconn               arp                             snmpxmon               CMIP Library                    snmpxperf               CMU SNMP                        snmpxperfmon               decaddrs                        snmpxrtmetric               DiG                             SPIMS               Dual Manager                    spray               etherfind                       tcpdump               etherhostprobe                  tcplogger               EtherView                       traceroute               getone                          TRPT               Internet Rover                  TTCP               map                             Unisys NCC               mconnect                        WIN/MGT Station               NETMON (II)                     xnetmon (I)               netstat                         XNETMON (II)               Network Integrator              xnetperfmon               net_monitor               nfswatch               nhfsstone                  VMS               NMC                             arp               NNStat                          ENTM               nslookup                        netstat               osilog                          net_monitor               osimic                          NPRV               osimon                          nslookup               OSITRACE                        ping               ping                            Snmp Libraries               proxyd                          tcpdump               query                           traceroute               SERAG                           TTCP               sma                             XNETMON (II)               SNMP Kit                        xnetperfmon               Snmp Libraries               snmpask               snmpd (I)               snmpd (II)               snmplookup               snmpperfmon               snmppoll               snmpquery               snmproute               snmpset               snmpsrc               snmpstat               snmptrapd               snmpwatchIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 18]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 1990                                        X               Dual Manager               map               snmpxbar               snmpxconn               snmpxmon               snmpxperf               snmpxperfmon               snmpxrtmetric               WIN/MGT Station               XNETMON (II)               xnetperfmon               xupIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 19]

RFC 1147    FYI: Network Management Tool Catalog  April 19903. Tool Descriptions                    This section is a collection of brief descriptions of tools          for managing TCP/IP internets.  These entries are in alpha-          betical order, by tool name.                    The entries all follow a standard format.  Immediately after          the NAME of a tool are its associated KEYWORDS.  Keywords          are terse descriptions of the purposes or attributes of a          tool.  A more detailed description of a tool's purpose and          characteristics is given in the ABSTRACT section.  The          MECHANISM section describes how a tool works.  In CAVEATS,          warnings about tool use are given.  In BUGS, known bugs or          bug-report procedures are given.  LIMITATIONS describes the          boundaries of a tool's capabilities.  HARDWARE REQUIRED and          SOFTWARE REQUIRED relate the operational environment a tool          needs.  Finally, in AVAILABILITY, pointers to vendors,          online repositories, or other sources for a tool are given.                    We deal with the problem of tool-name clashes -- different          tools that have the same name -- by appending parenthetical          roman numerals to the names.  For example, BYU, MITRE, and          SNMP Research each submitted a description of a tool called          "NETMON." These tools were independently developed, are          functionally different, run in different environments, and          are no more related than Richard Burton the 19th century          explorer and Richard Burton the 20th century actor.  BYU's          tool "NETMON" is listed as "NETMON (I)," MITRE's as "NETMON          (II)," and the tool from SNMP Research as "NETMON (III)."                    The parenthetical roman numerals reveal only the order in          which the catalog editor received the tool descriptions.          They should not be construed to indicate any sort of prefer-          ence, priority, or rights to a tool name.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 20]

Internet Tool Catalog                                    ARP                              NAME               arp                    KEYWORDS               routing; ethernet, IP; UNIX, VMS; free.                    ABSTRACT               Arp displays and can modify the internet-to-ethernet               address translations tables used by ARP, the address               resolution protocol.                    MECHANISM               The arp program accesses operating system memory to               read the ARP data structures.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               Only the super user can modify ARP entries.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               BSD UNIX or related OS, or VMS.                    AVAILABILITY               Available via anonymous FTP from uunet.uu.net, in               directory bsd-sources/src/etc.  Available with 4.xBSD               UNIX and related operating systems.  For VMS, available               as part of TGV MultiNet IP software package, as well as               Wollongong's WIN/TCP.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 21]

Internet Tool Catalog                           CMIP LIBRARY                              NAME               CMIP Library                    KEYWORDS               alarm, control, manager, status; OSI; UNIX; free,               library, sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               The CMIP Library implements the functionality of the               Common Management Information Service/Protocol as in               the documents ISO DP 9595-2/9596-2 of March 1988.  It               can act as a building block for the construction of               CMIP-based agent and manager applications.                    MECHANISM               The CMIP library uses ISO ROS, ACSE and ASN.1 presenta-               tion, as implemented in ISODE, to provide its service.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               The M-CREATE, M-DELETE and M-ACTION protocol primitives               are not implemented in this version.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun3, tested on Sun3 and VAXStation.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               The ISODE protocol suite, BSD UNIX.                    AVAILABILITY               The CMIP library and related management tools built               upon it, known as OSIMIS (OSI Management Information               Service), are publicly available from University Col-               lege London, England via FTP and FTAM.  To obtain               information regarding a copy send email to               gknight@ac.ucl.cs.uk or call +44 1 380 7366.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 22]

Internet Tool Catalog                               CMU SNMP                              NAME               The CMU SNMP Distribution                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX; free, sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               The CMU SNMP Distribution includes source code for an               SNMP agent, several SNMP client applications, an ASN.1               library, and supporting documentation.                         The agent compiles into about 10 KB of 68000 code.  The               distribution includes a full agent that runs on a               Kinetics FastPath2/3/4, and is built into the KIP               appletalk/ethernet gateway.  The machine independent               portions of this agent also run on CMU's IBM PC/AT               based router.                         The applications are designed to be useful in the real               world.  Information is collected and presented in a               useful format and is suitable for everyday status moni-               toring.  Input and output are interpreted symbolically.               The tools can be used without referencing the RFCs.                    MECHANISM               SNMP.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None reported.  Send bug reports to               sw0l+snmp@andrew.cmu.edu.  ("sw0l" is "ess double-you               zero ell.")                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               The KIP gateway agent runs on a Kinetics FastPath2/3/4.               Otherwise, no restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               The code was written with efficiency and portability in               mind.  The applications compile and run on the follow-               ing systems: IBM PC/RT running ACIS Release 3, Sun3/50               running SUNOS 3.5, and the DEC microVax running Ultrix               2.2.  They are expected to run on any system with aIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 23]

Internet Tool Catalog                               CMU SNMP                                   Berkeley socket interface.                    AVAILABILITY               This distribution is copyrighted by CMU, but may be               used and sold without permission.  Consult the copy-               right notices for further information.  The distribu-               tion is available by anonymous FTP from the host               lancaster.andrew.cmu.edu (128.2.13.21) as the files               pub/cmu-snmp.9.tar, and pub/kip-snmp.9.tar.  The former               includes the libraries and the applications, and the               latter is the KIP SNMP agent.                         Please direct questions, comments, and bug reports to               sw0l+snmp@andrew.cmu.edu.  ("sw0l" is "ess double-you               zero ell.")  If you pick up this package, please send a               note to the above address, so that you may be notified               of future enhancements/changes and additions to the set               of applications (several are planned).IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 24]

Internet Tool Catalog            COMPUTER SECURITY CHECKLIST                              NAME               Computer Security Checklist                    KEYWORDS               security; DOS.                    ABSTRACT               This program consists of 858 computer security ques-               tions divided up in thirteen sections.  The program               presents the questions to the user and records their               responses.  After answering the questions in one of the               thirteen sections, the user can generate a report from               the questions and the user's answers.  The thirteen               sections are: telecommunications security, physical               access security, personnel security, systems develop-               ment security, security awareness and training prac-               tices, organizational and management security, data and               program security, processing and operations security,               ergonomics and error prevention, environmental secu-               rity, and backup and recovery security.                         The questions are weighted as to their importance, and               the report generator can sort the questions by weight.               This way the most important issues can be tackled               first.                    MECHANISM               The questions are displayed on the screen and the user               is prompted for a single keystroke reply.  When the end               of one of the thirteen sections is reached, the answers               are written to a disk file.  The question file and the               answer file are merged to create the report file.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               DOS operating system.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 25]

Internet Tool Catalog            COMPUTER SECURITY CHECKLIST                                        AVAILABILITY               A commercial product available from:                    C.D., Ltd.                    P.O. Box 58363                    Seattle, WA 98138                    (206) 243-8700IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 26]

Internet Tool Catalog                            CONNECTVIEW                              NAME               ConnectVIEW                    KEYWORDS               control, manager, routing, security, status; bridge,               ethernet, ring; NMS, proprietary; DOS.                    ABSTRACT               The ConnectVIEW Network Management System consists of               various software managers that control and manage Hal-               ley System's internets made of of ConnectLAN 100 ether-               net and ConnectLAN 200 Token Ring Brouters.  The               management software provides an icon-based graphical               network display with real-time monitoring and report-               ing, along with configuration, fault, performance and               security management functions for managing ConnectLAN               brouters.  A Planning function is also provided that               allows users to draw their networks.                    MECHANISM               Proprietary.                    CAVEATS               The ConnectVIEW software must be running under Micro-               soft Windows, preferably on a dedicated management sta-               tion.  There is, however, no degradation of LAN               throughput.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               Currently works only with Halley System's products.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Requires a PC/AT compatible, with 640KB RAM, EGA               adapter and monitor, keyboard, mouse, and ethernet               adapter.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               MSDOS 3.3 or higher.  Microsoft Windows/286 version               2.1.                    AVAILABILITY               Commercially available from:                    Halley Systems, Inc.                    2730 Orchard Parkway                    San Jose, CA  95134IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 27]

Internet Tool Catalog                            CONNECTVIEW                              NAME               decaddrs, decaroute, decnroute, xnsroutes, bridgetab                    KEYWORDS               manager, map, routing; bridge, DECnet; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               These commands display private MIB information from               Wellfleet systems.  They retrieve and format for               display values of one or several MIB variables from the               Wellfleet Communications private enterprise MIB, using               the SNMP (RFC1098).  In particular these tools are used               to examine the non-IP modules (DECnet, XNS, and Bridg-               ing) of a Wellfleet system.                         Decaddrs displays the DECnet configuration of a               Wellfleet system acting as a DECnet router, showing the               static parameters associated with each DECnet inter-               face.  Decaroute and decnroute display the DECnet               inter-area and intra-area routing tables (that is area               routes and node routes).  Xnsroutes displays routes               known to a Wellfleet system acting as an XNS router.               Bridgetab displays the bridge forwarding table with the               disposition of traffic arriving from or directed to               each station known to the Wellfleet bridge module.  All               these commands take an IP address as the argument and               can specify an SNMP community for the retrieval.  One               SNMP query is performed for each row of the table.               Note that the Wellfleet system must be operating as an               IP router for the SNMP to be accessible.                    MECHANISM               Management information is exchanged by use of SNMP.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Distributed and supported for Sun 3 systems.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Distributed and supported for SunOS 3.5 and 4.x.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 28]

Internet Tool Catalog            DECADDRS, DECAROUTE, et al.                                        AVAILABILITY               Commercial product of:                    Wellfleet Communications, Inc.                    12 DeAngelo Drive                    Bedford, MA 01730-2204                    (617) 275-2400IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 29]

Internet Tool Catalog                                    DIG                              NAME               DiG                    KEYWORDS               status; DNS; spoof; UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               DiG (domain information groper), is a command line tool               which queries DNS servers in either an interactive or a               batch mode.  It was developed to be more               convenient/flexible than nslookup for gathering perfor-               mance data and testing DNS servers.                    MECHANISM               Dig is built on a slightly modified version of the bind               resolver (release 4.8).                    CAVEATS               none.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               BSD UNIX.                    AVAILABILITY               DiG is available via anonymous FTP from venera.isi.edu               in pub/dig.1.0.tar.Z.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 30]

Internet Tool Catalog                           DUAL MANAGER                              NAME               Dual Manager                    KEYWORDS               alarm, control, manager, map, security, status; IP,               OSI; NMS, SNMP, X; UNIX; library.                    ABSTRACT               Netlabs' Dual Manager provides management of TCP/IP               networks using both SNMP and CMOT protocols.  Such               management can be initiated either through the X-               Windows user interface (both Motif and Openlook), or               through OSI Network Management (CMIP) commands.  The               Dual Manager provides for configuration, fault, secu-               rity and performance management.  It provides extensive               map management features, including scanned maps in the               background.  It provides simple mechanisms to extend               the MIB and assign specific lists of objects to               specific network elements, thereby providing for the               management of all vendors' specific MIB extensions.  It               provides an optional relational DBMS for storing and               retrieving MIB and alarm information.  Finally, the               Dual Manager is an open platform, in that it provides               several Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) for               users to extend the functionality of the Dual Manager.                         The Dual Manager is expected to work as a TCP/IP               "branch manager" under DEC's EMA, AT&T's UNMA and other               OSI-conformant enterprise management architectures.                    MECHANISM               The Netlabs Dual Manager supports the control and moni-               toring of network resources by use of both CMOT and               SNMP message exchanges.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Runs on Sun/3 and Sun/4s.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 31]

Internet Tool Catalog                           DUAL MANAGER                                        SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Available on System V or SCO Open Desktop environments.               Uses X-Windows for the user interface.                    AVAILABILITY               Commercially available from:                    Netlabs Inc                    11693 Chenault Street Ste 348                    Los Angeles CA 90049                    (213) 476-4070                    lam@netlabs.com (Anne Lam)IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 32]

Internet Tool Catalog                                   ENTM                              NAME               ENTM -- Ethernet Traffic Monitor                    KEYWORDS               traffic; ethernet, IP; eavesdrop; VMS; free.                    ABSTRACT               ENTM is a screen-oriented utility that runs under               VAX/VMS.  It monitors local ethernet traffic and               displays either a real time or cumulative, histogram               showing a percent breakdown of traffic by ethernet pro-               tocol type.  The information in the display can be               reported based on packet count or byte count.  The per-               cent of broadcast, multicast and approximate lost pack-               ets is reported as well.  The screen display is updated               every three seconds.  Additionally, a real time, slid-               ing history window may be displayed showing ethernet               traffic patterns for the last five minutes.                         ENTM can also report IP traffic statistics by packet               count or byte count.  The IP histograms reflect infor-               mation collected at the TCP and UDP port level, includ-               ing ICMP type/code combinations.  Both the ethernet and               IP histograms may be sorted by ASCII protocol/port name               or by percent-value.  All screen displays can be saved               in a file for printing later.                    MECHANISM               This utility simply places the ethernet controller in               promiscuous mode and monitors the local area network               traffic.  It preallocates 10 receive buffers and               attempts to keep 22 reads pending on the ethernet dev-               ice.                    CAVEATS               Placing the ethernet controller in promiscuous mode may               severly slow down a VAX system.  Depending on the speed               of the VAX system and the amount of traffic on the  lo-               cal  ethernet,  a large amount of CPU time may be spent               on the Interrupt Stack.  Running this code on any  pro-               duction system during operational hours is discouraged.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 33]

Internet Tool Catalog                                   ENTM                                        BUGS               Due to a bug in the VAX/VMS ethernet/802 device driver,               IEEE  802 format packets may not always be detected.  A               simple test is performed to "guess" which  packets  are               in  IEEE  802  format (DSAP equal to SSAP).  Thus, some               DSAP/SSAP pairs may be reported as  an  ethernet  type,               while  valid ethernet types may be reported as IEEE 802               packets.                         In some hardware configurations, placing an ethernet               controller in promiscuous mode with automatic-restart               enabled will hang the controller.  Our VAX 8650 hangs               running this code, while our uVAX IIs and uVAX IIIs do               not.                         Please report any additional bugs to the author at:                    Allen Sturtevant                    National Magnetic Fusion Energy Computer Center                    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory                    P.O. Box 808; L-561                    Livermore, CA  94550                    Phone : (415) 422-8266                    E-Mail: sturtevant@ccc.nmfecc.gov                    LIMITATIONS               The user is required to have PHY_IO, TMPMBX and NETMBX               privileges.  When activated, the program first checks               that the user process as enough quotas remaining               (BYTLM, BIOLM, ASTLM and PAGFLQUO) to successfully run               the program without entering into an involuntary wait               state.  Some quotas require a fairly generous setting.                         The contents of IEEE 802 packets are not examined.               Only the presence of IEEE 802 packets on the wire is               reported.                         The count of lost packets is approximated.  If, after               each read completes on the ethernet device, the utility               detects that it has no reads pending on that device,               the lost packet counter is incremented by one.                         When the total number of bytes processed exceeds               7fffffff hex, all counters are automatically reset to               zero.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               A DEC ethernet controller.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 34]

Internet Tool Catalog                                   ENTM                                        SOFTWARE REQUIRED               VAX/VMS version V5.1+.                    AVAILABILITY               For executables only,  FTP  to  the  ANONYMOUS  account               (password  GUEST) on CCC.NMFECC.GOV and GET the follow-               ing files:                         [ANONYMOUS.PROGRAMS.ENTM]ENTM.DOC     (ASCII text)               [ANONYMOUS.PROGRAMS.ENTM]ENTM.EXE     (binary)               [ANONYMOUS.PROGRAMS.ENTM]EN_TYPES.DAT (ASCII text)               [ANONYMOUS.PROGRAMS.ENTM]IP_TYPES.DAT (ASCII text)IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 35]

Internet Tool Catalog                              ETHERFIND                              NAME               etherfind                    KEYWORDS               traffic; ethernet, IP, NFS; eavesdrop; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Etherfind examines the packets that traverse a network               interface, and outputs a text file describing the               traffic.  In the file, a single line of text describes               a single packet: it contains values such as protocol               type, length, source, and destination.  Etherfind can               print out all packet traffic on the ethernet, or               traffic for the local host.  Further packet filtering               can be done on the basis of protocol: IP, ARP, RARP,               ICMP, UDP, ND, TCP, and filtering can also be done               based on the source, destination addresses as well as               TCP and UDP port numbers.                    MECHANISM               In usual operations, and by default, etherfind puts the               interface in promiscuous mode.  In 4.3BSD UNIX and               related OSs, it uses a Network Interface Tap (NIT) to               obtain a copy of traffic on an ethernet interface.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               Minimal protocol information is printed.  Can  only  be               run by the super user.  The syntax is painful.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Ethernet.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               SunOS.                    AVAILABILITY               Executable included in Sun  OS  "Networking  Tools  and               Programs" software installation option.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 36]

Internet Tool Catalog                         ETHERHOSTPROBE                              NAME               etherhostprobe                    KEYWORDS               map, routing; ethernet, IP; ping; UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               Output list of hosts on an ethernet that respond to IP               ARP.  Produces a list in the following format:                              08:00:20:01:96:62   128.18.4.114    apptek4                    08:00:20:00:02:fe   128.18.4.115    apptek5                    08:00:20:00:57:6a   128.18.4.116    apptek6                    08:00:20:00:65:34   128.18.4.117    apptek7                    08:00:20:06:58:6f   128.18.4.118    apptek8                    08:00:20:00:03:4f   128.18.4.119    apptek9                         The first column is the ethernet address, the second               the IP address, and the third is the hostname (which is               omitted if the name could not be found via gethost-               byaddr).  A starting and ending IP address may be               specified on the command line, which will limit the               search.                    MECHANISM               Etherhostprobe sends a UDP packet to the ``echo'' port,               then looks in the kernel's ARP cache for the               corresponding address entry.  Explicit response (or               lack of same) to the UDP packet is ignored.  The cache               will be checked up to four times at one-quarter-second               intervals.  Note that this allows the program to be run               by a user with no special privileges.                    CAVEATS               Etherhostprobe will fill the kernel's ARP cache with               possibly useless entries, possibly causing delays to               programs foolishly attempting to accomplish real work.                         Etherhostprobe causes -lots- of ARPs to be generated,               possibly fooling network monitoring software (or peo-               ple) into concluding that something is horribly broken.                         Etherhostprobe spends up to one second looking for each               possible address.  Thus, exhaustively searching a               class-C network will take about four minutes, and               exhaustively searching a class-B network will take               about 18 hours.  Exhaustively searching a class-A net-               work will take the better part of a year, so don't evenIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 37]

Internet Tool Catalog                         ETHERHOSTPROBE                                   think about it.                         Etherhostprobe will be fooled by gateways that imple-               ment proxy ARP; every possible address on the proxy-               ARPed subnet will be listed with the gateway's ethernet               address.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               If a given machine is not running IP ARP at the time               that it is probed, it will be considered nonexistent.               In particular, if a given machine is down at the time               that it is probed . . .                         All hosts being probed must be on the same (possibly               bridged) ethernet.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions, but see below.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Runs on SunOS 3.5, and possibly elsewhere.  The major               non-standard portion of code is ``tx_arp.c'', which               reads the kernel's ARP cache.                    AVAILABILITY               Copyrighted, but  freely  distributed.   Available  via               anonymous  FTP  from  spam.itstd.sri.com (128.18.10.1).               From pub directory, file EHP.1 for etherhostprobe,  and               files IPF.1 and IPF.2 for ipForwarding.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 38]

Internet Tool Catalog                             ETHERMETER                              NAME               EtherMeter (tm), model LANB/150                    KEYWORDS               alarm, map, traffic; ethernet; NMS, proprietary; stan-               dalone.                    ABSTRACT               The Network Applications Technology (NAT) EtherMeter               product is a dedicated ethernet traffic monitor that               provides statistics on the ethernet segment to which it               is attached.  The EtherMeter reports three major kinds               of statistics.  For good packets, it reports the total               number of good packets seen on the segment, the number               of multicast and broadcast packets, and the total               number of bytes in all packets seen.  For packets with               errors, it reports the number of CRC errors, short               packets, oversize packets, and alignment errors.  It               also reports the distribution of packet by type, and               the number of protocols seen on the segment.  A count               of transmit collisions is reported.  Peak and current               ethernet utilization rates are also reported, etc.               Alarms can be set for utilization rate, packet rate,               total error count, and delta error.                         The EtherMeter reports the statistics to a Network               Management Station (NMS), also available from NAT, via               IP/UDP datagrams, so that the meters can be monitored               through routers.  The NMS displays graphical and/or               textual information, and EtherMeter icons turn colors               to indicate status.  Alarms can be set, and if the lev-               els are exceeded an audible alarm is generated on the               NMS, and the EtherMeter icon changes from green to yel-               low on the network map.                    MECHANISM               The EtherMeter is a self-contained board that can               either be plugged into a PC/AT bus for power or               installed in a small stand-alone enclosure.  The board               can be obtained with either a 10BASE5 thick ethernet               transceiver cable connector, or a 10BASE2 thin ethernet               BNC connector.                    CAVEATS               The EtherMeter is primarily a passive device whose only               impact  on  the  network  will come from the monitoring               packets sent to the NMS.  The EtherMeter is assigned an               IP address for communication with the NMS.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 39]

Internet Tool Catalog                             ETHERMETER                                        BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               Proprietary protocol currently in use.  The company has               stated its intention to develop SNMP for the EtherMeter               product in the first half of 1990.  Currently the NMS               does not keep log files.  This limitation is ack-               nowledged, and plans are underway to add ASCII log file               capability to the NMS.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               An EtherMeter board and a PC/AT bus to plug it into, or               a stand-alone enclosure with power supply (available               from NAT).  A Network Management Station and its               software is required as well, to fully interact with               the EtherMeter devices.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               The EtherMeter software is included in ROM on the dev-               ice.  The NMS software is bundled in with the NMS               hardware.                    AVAILABILITY               The EtherMeter device, stand-alone enclosure, and  Net-               work  Management  Station,  are  available commercially               from:                              Network Application Technology, Inc.                    21040 Homestead Road                    Cupertino, California 95014                    Phone: (408) 733-4530                    Fax: (408) 733-6478IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 40]

Internet Tool Catalog                              ETHERVIEW                              NAME               EtherView(tm)                    KEYWORDS               traffic; ethernet, IP, NFS; eavesdrop; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               EtherView is a network monitoring tool which runs on               Sun workstations and allows you to monitor your hetero-               geneous internet network.  It monitors all systems on               the ethernet.  It has three primary functions:                         Load Profile:  It allows users to monitor the load on               the ethernet over extended periods of time.  The net-               work administrator can use it to characterize load gen-               erated by a node on the network, determine which sys-               tems and applications generate how much of the load and               how that load fluctuates over long periods of time.                         NFS Profile:  It allows the network administrator to               determine the load on NFS servers, the average response               time NFS servers and the mix of NFS load on each of the               servers.  Users can use the data to benchmark different               NFS servers, determine which servers are overloaded,               deduce the number of clients that each server can sup-               port and evaluate the effectiveness of NFS accelera-               tors.                         Protocol Analyzer:  Users can capture packets based on               source, destination, application, protocol, bit pat-               tern, packet size or a boolean filtering expression.               It provides all standard features such as configurable               buffer size, packet slicing and bit pattern based               triggering criterion.  It does automatic disassembly of               NFS, TCP, UDP, IP, ICMP, ARP and RARP packets.  Packets               can be examined in any combination of summary, hex or               detail format.                    MECHANISM               EtherView uses the Sun's NIT interface to turn the eth-               ernet interface into promiscuous mode to capture pack-               ets.  A high level process manages the interface and a               low level process does the actual capturing and filter-               ing.  Shared memory is used to communicate between the               two processes.                    BUGS               None known.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 41]

Internet Tool Catalog                              ETHERVIEW                                        LIMITATIONS               Because of limitations in Sun's NIT  interface,  Ether-               View will not capture packets originating from the sys-               tem where it is run.                         EtherView requires super-user privileges on the system               where it is run.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               EtherView runs on all models of Sun-3, Sun-4 and Sun-               386i.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Sun-3      - SunOS 4.0.3. (SunOS 4.0 with NIT fixes).               Sun-4      - SunOS 4.0.               Sun-386i   - SunOS 4.0.                         Runs under SunView.               Will run under X Windows in future.                    AVAILABILITY               EtherView is copyrighted, commercial product of:                    Matrix Computer Systems, Inc.                    7 1/2 Harris Road                    Nashua, NH 03062                              Tel: (603) 888-7790                    email: ...uunet!matrix!eviewIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 42]

Internet Tool Catalog                GETONE, GETMANY, et al.                              NAME               getone, getmany, getroute, getarp, getaddr, getif,               getid.                    KEYWORDS               manager, routing, status; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               These commands retrieve and format for display values               of one or several MIB variables (RFC1066) using the               SNMP (RFC1098).  Getone and getmany retrieve arbitrary               MIB variables; getroute, getarp, getaddr, and getif               retrieve and display tabular information (routing               tables, ARP table, interface configuration, etc.), and               getid retrieves and displays system name, identifica-               tion and boot time.                         Getone <target> <mibvariable> retrieves and displays               the value of the designated MIB variable from the               specified target system.  The SNMP community name to be               used for the retrieval can also be specified.  Getmany               works similarly for groups of MIB variables rather than               individual values.  The name of each variable, its               value and its data type is displayed.  Getroute returns               information from the ipRoutingTable MIB structure,               displaying the retrieved information in an accessible               format.  Getarp behaves similarly for the address               translation table; getaddr for the ipAddressTable; and               getif displays information from the interfaces table,               supplemented with information from the ipAddressTable.               Getid displays the system name, identification, ipFor-               warding state, and the boot time and date.  All take a               system name or IP address as an argument and can               specify an SNMP community for the retrieval.  One SNMP               query is performed for each row of the table.                    MECHANISM               Queries SNMP agent(s).                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 43]

Internet Tool Catalog                GETONE, GETMANY, et al.                                        HARDWARE REQUIRED               Distributed and supported for Sun 3 systems.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Distributed and supported for SunOS 3.5 and 4.x.                    AVAILABILITY               Commercial product of:                    Wellfleet Communications, Inc.                    12 DeAngelo Drive                    Bedford, MA 01730-2204                    (617) 275-2400IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 44]

Internet Tool Catalog                         HAMMER & ANVIL                              NAME               hammer & anvil                    KEYWORDS               benchmark, generator; IP; DOS; free.                    ABSTRACT               Hammer and anvil are the benchmarking programs for IP               routers.  Using these tools, gateways have been tested               for per-packet delay, router-generated traffic over-               head, maximum sustained throughput, etc.                    MECHANISM               Tests are performed on a gateway in an isolated               testbed.  Hammer generates packets at controlled rates.               It can set the length and interpacket interval of a               packet stream.  Anvil counts packet arrivals.                    CAVEATS               Hammer should not be run on a live network.                    BUGS               None reported.                    LIMITATIONS               Early versions of hammer could not produce inter-packet               intervals shorter than 55 usec.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Hammer runs on a PC/AT or compatible, and anvil               requires a PC or clone.  Both use a Micom Interlan               NI5210 for LAN interface.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               MS-DOS.                    AVAILABILITY               Hammer and anvil are copyrighted, though free.  Copies               are available from pub/eutil on husc6.harvard.edu.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 45]

Internet Tool Catalog                               HOPCHECK                              NAME               hopcheck                    KEYWORDS               routing; IP; ping; DOS; free.                    ABSTRACT               Hopcheck is a tool that lists the gateways traversed by               packets sent from the hopcheck-resident PC to a desti-               nation.  Hopcheck uses the same mechanism as traceroute               but is for use on IBM PC compatibles that have ethernet               connections.  Hopcheck is part of a larger TCP/IP pack-               age that is known as ka9q that is for use with packet               radio.  Ka9q can coexist on a PC with other TCP/IP               packages such as FTP Inc's PC/TCP, but must be used               independently of other packages.  Ka9q was written by               Phil Karn.  Hopcheck was added by Katie Stevens,               dkstevens@ucdavis.edu.  Unlike traceroute, which               requires a UNIX kernel mod, hopcheck will run on the               standard, unmodified ka9q release.                    MECHANISM               See the description in traceroute.                    CAVEATS               See the description in traceroute.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               Host table required.  Does not work with domain name               server or with IP address as the argument.  This is               mainly an inconvenience.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               IBM PC compatible with ethernet network interface card,               though does not work with 3Com 505 board.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               DOS.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 46]

Internet Tool Catalog                               HOPCHECK                                        AVAILABILITY               Free.  On deposit at the National Center for Atmospher-               ic  Research.   For  access  from  UNIX,  available via               anonymous FTP from windom.ucar.edu, in directory "etc,"               as  hopcheck.tar.Z.   For  access  directly  from a PC,               fetch nethop.exe and readme.hop; nethop.exe is  execut-               able.  Also available via anonymous FTP at ucdavis.edu,               in the nethopexe or nethopsrc suite of files in  direc-               tory "dist."IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 47]

Internet Tool Catalog                               HYPERMIB                              NAME               HyperMIB                    KEYWORDS               reference; Macintosh; free, sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               HyperMIB is a hypertext presentation of the MIB               (RFC1066).  The tree structure of the MIB is presented               graphically, and the user traverses the tree by select-               ing branches of the tree.  When the MIB variables are               displayed, selecting them causes a text window to               appear and show the definition of that variable (using               the actual text of the MIB document).                    MECHANISM               The Apple Macintosh HyperCard utility is used.  The               actual text of the MIB document is read into scrollable               text windows, and a string search is done on the vari-               able selected.  A person familiar with HyperCard pro-               gramming could modify the program to suit their needs               (such as to add the definitions for their company's               private space).                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               This program only gives the definition of the MIB vari-               ables.  It cannot poll a node to find the value of the               variables.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Apple Macintosh computer with at least 1MByte of RAM.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Apple Macintosh operating system and HyperCard.                    AVAILABILITY               This software may be copied and given away without               charge.  The files are available by anonymous FTP on               CCC.NMFECC.GOV.  The files are:                         [Anonymous.programs.HyperMIB]Hyper_MIB.help  (ASCII text)               [Anonymous.programs.HyperMIB]Hyper.MIB       (binary)IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 48]

Internet Tool Catalog                               HYPERMIB                                   [Anonymous.programs.HyperMIB]MIB.tree        (binary)                         The software is also available for a nominal fee from:                         National Energy Software Center               Argonne National Laboratory               9700 South Cass Avenue               Argonne, Illinois 60439               (312) 972-7250IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 49]

Internet Tool Catalog                         INTERNET ROVER                              NAME               Internet Rover                    KEYWORDS               status; IP, SMTP; curses, ping, spoof; UNIX; free,               sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               Internet Rover is a prototype network monitor that uses               multiple protocol "modules" to test network functional-               ity.  This package consists of two primary pieces of               code: the data collector and the problem display.                         There is one data collector that performs a series of               network tests, and maintains a list of problems with               the network.  There can be many display processes all               displaying the current list of problems which is useful               in a multi-operator NOC.                         The display task uses curses, allowing many terminal               types to display the problem file either locally or               from a remote site.  Full source is provided.  The data               collector is easily configured and extensible.  Contri-               butions such as additional protocol modules, and shell               script extensions are welcome.                    MECHANISM               A configuration file contains a list of nodes,               addresses, NodeUp? protocol test (ping in most cases),               and a list of further tests to be performed if the node               is in fact up.  Modules are included to test TELNET,               FTP, and SMTP.  If the configuration contains a test               that isn't recognized, a generic test is assumed, and a               filename is checked for existence.  This way users can               create scripts that create a file if there is a prob-               lem, and the data collector simply checks the existence               of that file to determine if there is problem.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 50]

Internet Tool Catalog                         INTERNET ROVER                                        LIMITATIONS               This tools does not yet have the capability to  perform               actions based on the result of the test.  Rather, it is               intended for a multi-operator environment,  and  simply               displays a list of what is wrong with the net.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               This software is known to run on Suns and IBM RTs.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Curses, 4.xBSD UNIX socket programming  libraries,  BSD               ping.                    AVAILABILITY               Full source available via anonymous FTP from  merit.edu               (35.1.1.42)   in   the   ~ftp/pub/inetrover  directory.               Source and executables are public  domain  and  can  be               freely  distributed for non-commercial use.  This pack-               age is unsupported, but bug reports and  fixes  may  be               sent to: wbn@merit.edu.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 51]

Internet Tool Catalog                             LAN PATROL                              NAME               LAN Patrol                    KEYWORDS               security, traffic; ethernet, star; eavesdrop; DOS.                    ABSTRACT               LAN Patrol is a full-featured network analyzer that               provides essential information for effective fault and               performance management.  It allows network managers to               easily monitor user activity, find traffic overloads,               plan for growth, test cable, uncover intruders, balance               network services, and so on.  LAN Patrol uses state of               the art data collection techniques to monitor all               activity on a network, giving an accurate picture of               how it is performing.                         LAN Patrol's reports can be saved as ASCII files to               disk, and imported into spreadsheet or database pro-               grams for further analysis.                    MECHANISM               The LAN Patrol interface driver programs a standard               interface card to capture all traffic on a network seg-               ment.  The driver operates from the background of a               standard PC, maintaining statistics for each station on               the network.  The information can be viewed on the PC's               screen, or as a user-defined report output either to               file or printer.                    CAVEATS               None.  Normal operation is completely passive, making               LAN Patrol transparent to the network.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               LAN Patrol can monitor up to 10,000 packets/sec on an               AT class PC, and is limited to monitoring a maximum of               1024 stations for intervals of up to 30 days.                         Because LAN Patrol operates at the physical level, it               will only see traffic for the segment on which it is               installed; it cannot see traffic across bridges.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 52]

Internet Tool Catalog                             LAN PATROL                                        HARDWARE REQUIRED               Computer: IBM PC/XT/AT, PS/2 Model 30,  or  compatible.               Requires  512K  memory and a hard drive or double-sided               disk drive.                         Display: Color or monochrome text.  Color display               allows color-coding of traffic information.                         Ethernet, StarLAN, LattisNet, or StarLAN 10 network               interface card.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               PC DOS, MS-DOS version 3.1 or greater.                    AVAILABILITY               LAN Patrol many be purchased through  network  dealers,               or directly from:                    Legend Software, Inc.                    Phone:  (201) 227-8771                    FAX:    (201) 906-1151IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 53]

Internet Tool Catalog                               LANPROBE                              NAME               LanProbe -- the HP 4990S LanProbe Distributed Analysis               System.                    KEYWORDS               alarm, manager, map, status, traffic; ethernet; eaves-               drop, NMS; proprietary.                    ABSTRACT               The LanProbe distributed monitoring system performs               remote and local monitoring of ethernet LANs in a pro-               tocol and vendor independent manner.                         LanProbe discovers each active node on a segment and               displays it on a map with its adapter card vendor name,               ethernet address, and IP address.  Additional informa-               tion about the nodes, such as equipment type and physi-               cal location can be entered in to the data base by the               user.                         When the NodeLocator option is used, data on the actual               location of nodes is automatically entered and the map               becomes an accurate representation of the physical lay-               out of the segment.  Thereafter when a new node is               installed and becomes active, or when a node is moved               or becomes inactive, the change is detected and shown               on the map in real time.  The system also provides the               network manager with precise cable fault information               displayed on the map.                         Traffic statistics are gathered and displayed and can               be exported in (comma delimited) CSV format for further               analysis.  Alerts can be set on user defined thres-               holds.                         Trace provides a remote protocol analyzer capability               with decodes for common protocols.                         Significant events (like power failure, cable breaks,               new node on network, broadcast IP source address seen,               etc.) are tracked in a log that is uploaded to Pro-               beView periodically.                         ProbeView generates reports that can be manipulated by               MSDOS based word processors, spreadsheets, and DBMS.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 54]

Internet Tool Catalog                               LANPROBE                                        MECHANISM               The system consists of one or more LanProbe segment               monitors and ProbeView software running under Microsoft               Windows.  The LanProbe segment monitor attaches to the               end of an ethernet segment and monitors all traffic.               Attachment can be direct to a thin or thick coax cable,               or via an external transceiver to fiber optic or twist-               ed pair cabling.  Network data relating to the segment               is transferred to a workstation running ProbeView via               RS-232, ethernet, or a modem connection.                         ProbeView software, which runs on a PC/AT class works-               tation, presents network information in graphical               displays.                         The HP4992A NodeLocator option attaches to the opposite               end of the cable from the HP4991A LanProbe segment mon-               itor.  It automatically locates the position of nodes               on the ethernet networks using coaxial cabling schemes.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               HP 4991A LanProbe segment monitor               HP 4992A NodeLocator (for optional capabilities)               80386 based PC capable of running MS-Windows                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               HP 4990A ProbeView               MSDOS 3.0 or higher and Microsoft Windows/286 2.1.                    AVAILABILITY               A commercial product available from:                    Hewlett-Packard Company                    P.O. Box 10301,                    Palo Alto, CA  94303-0890IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 55]

Internet Tool Catalog                               LANWATCH                              NAME               LANWatch                    KEYWORDS               alarm, analyzer, traffic; CHAOS, DECnet, DNS, ethernet,               IP, OSI, ring, SMTP, star; eavesdrop; DOS; library,               sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               LANWatch 2.0 is an inexpensive, powerful and flexible               network analyzer that runs under DOS on personal com-               puters and requires no hardware modifications to either               the host or the network.  LANWatch is an invaluable               tool for installing, troubleshooting, and monitoring               local area networks, and for developing and debugging               new protocols.  Network managers using LANWatch can               inspect network traffic patterns and packet errors to               isolate performance problems and bottlenecks.  Protocol               developers can use LANWatch to inspect and verify               proper protocol handling.  Since LANWatch is a               software-only package which installs easily in existing               PCs, network technicians and field service engineers               can carry LANWatch in their briefcase for convenient               network analysis at remote sites.                         LANWatch has two operating modes: Display and Examine.               In Display Mode, LANWatch traces network traffic by               displaying captured packets in real time.  Examine Mode               allows you to scroll back through stored packets to               inspect them in detail.  To select a subset of packets               for display, storage or retrieval, there is an exten-               sive set of built-in filters.  Using filters, LANWatch               collects only packets of interest, saving the user from               having to sort through all network traffic to isolate               specific packets.  The built-in filters include alarm,               trigger, capture, load, save and search.  They can be               controlled separately to match on source or destination               address, protocol, or packet contents at the hardware               and transport layers.  LANWatch also includes suffi-               cient source code so users can modify the existing               filters and parsers or add new ones.                         The LANWatch distribution includes executables and               source for several post-processors: a TCP protocol               analyzer, a node-by-node traffic analyzer and a dump               file listing tool.                    MECHANISMIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 56]

Internet Tool Catalog                               LANWATCH                                   Uses many common PC network interfaces by placing them               in promiscuous mode and capturing traffic.                    CAVEATS               Most PC network interfaces will not capture 100% of the               traffic on a fully-loaded network (primarily missing               back-to-back packets).                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               LANWatch can't analyze what it doesn't see (see               Caveats).                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               LANWatch requires a PC or PS/2 with a supported network               interface card.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               LANWatch runs in DOS.  Modification of the supplied               source code or creation of additional filters and               parsers requires Microsoft C 5.1                    AVAILABILITY               LANWatch is commercially available from FTP Software,               Incorporated, 26 Princess Street, Wakefield, MA, 01880               (617 246-0900).IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 57]

Internet Tool Catalog                                    MAP                              NAME               map -- Interactive Network Map                    KEYWORDS               manager, map; CHAOS, ethernet, IP, ring, star; NMS,               ping, SNMP, X; UNIX; free, sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               Map draws a map of network connectivity and allows               interactive examination of information about various               components including whether hosts can be reached over               the network.                         The program is supplied with complete source and is               written in a modular fashion to make addition of dif-               ferent protocols stacks, displays, or hardcopy devices               relatively easy.  This is one of the reasons why the               initial version supports at least two of each.  Contri-               butions of additional drivers in any of these areas               will be welcome as well as porting to additional plat-               forms.                    MECHANISM               Net components are pinged by use of ICMP echo and,               optionally, CHAOS status requests and SNMP "gets."  The               program initializes itself from static data stored in               the file system and therefore does not need to access               the network in order to get running (unless the static               files are network mounted).                    CAVEATS               As of publication, the tool is in beta release.                    BUGS               Several minor nits, documented in distribution files.               Bug discoveries should be reported by email to Bug-               Map@LCS.MIT.Edu.                    LIMITATIONS               See distribution file for an indepth discussion of sys-               tem capabilities and potential.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               An X display is needed for interactive display of the               map, non-graphical interaction is available in non-               display mode.  For hardcopy output a PostScript or Tek-               tronix 4692 printer is required.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 58]

Internet Tool Catalog                                    MAP                                        SOFTWARE REQUIRED               BSD UNIX or related OS.  IP/ICMP is required;               CHAOS/STATUS and SNMP can be used but are optional.               X-Windows is required for interactive display of the               map.                    AVAILABILITY               As of publication, map is in beta release.  To be added               to the email forum that discusses the software, or to               obtain individual files or instructions on getting the               full current release, send a request to:                              MAP-Request@LCS.MIT.Edu.                         The program is Copyright MIT.  It is available via               anonymous FTP with a license making it free to use and               distribute for non-commercial purposes.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 59]

Internet Tool Catalog                               MCONNECT                              NAME               mconnect                    KEYWORDS               status; SMTP; spoof; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Mconnect allows an interactive session with a remote               mailer.  Mail delivery problems can be diagnosed by               connecting to the remote mailer and issuing SMTP com-               mands directly.                    MECHANISM               Opens a TCP connection to remote SMTP on port 25.  Pro-               vides local line buffering and editing, which is the               distinction between mconnect and a TELNET to port 25.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               Mconnect is not a large improvement over using a TELNET               connection to port 25.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               BSD UNIX or related OS.                    AVAILABILITY               Available with 4.xBSD UNIX and related operating sys-               tems.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 60]

Internet Tool Catalog                     NETLABS CMOT AGENT                              NAME               Netlabs CMOT Agent                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP, OSI; NMS.                    ABSTRACT               Netlabs' CMOT code debuted in Interop 89.  The CMOT               code comes with an Extensible MIB, which allows users               to add new MIB variables.  The code currently supports               all the MIB variables inRFC 1095 via the data types inRFC 1065, as well as the emerging MIB-II, which is               currently in experimental stage.  The CMOT has been               benchmarked at 100 Management Operations per Second               (MOPS) for a 1-MIPS machine.                    MECHANISM               The Netlabs CMOT agent supports the control and moni-               toring of network resources by use of CMOT message               exchanges.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Portable to most hardware.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Portable to most operating systems.                    AVAILABILITY               Commercially available from:                    Netlabs Inc                    11693 Chenault Street Ste 348                    Los Angeles CA 90049                    (213) 476-4070                    lam@netlabs.com (Anne Lam)IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 61]

Internet Tool Catalog                     NETLABS SNMP AGENT                              NAME               Netlabs SNMP Agent.                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP.                    ABSTRACT               Netlabs' SNMP code debuted in Interop 89, where it               showed interoperation of the code with several imple-               mentations on the show floor.  The SNMP code comes with               an Extensible MIB, which allows users to add new MIB               variables.  The code currently supports all the MIB               variables inRFC 1066 via the data types inRFC 1065,               as well as the emerging MIB-II, which is currently in               experimental stage.  The SNMP has been benchmarked at               200 Management Operations per Second (MOPS) for a 1-               MIPS machine.                    MECHANISM               The Netlabs SNMP agent supports the control and moni-               toring of network resources by use of SNMP message               exchanges.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Portable to most hardware.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Portable to most operating systems.                    AVAILABILITY               Commercially available from:                    Netlabs Inc                    11693 Chenault Street Ste 348                    Los Angeles CA 90049                    (213) 476-4070                    lam@netlabs.com (Anne Lam)IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 62]

Internet Tool Catalog                             NETMON (I)                              NAME               netmon                    KEYWORDS               status; DNS, IP; ping; DOS; free.                    ABSTRACT               Netmon is a DOS-based program that pings hosts on a               monitored list at user-specified intervals.  In addi-               tion, a user may optionally ping hosts not on the list.                         Netmon also performs domain lookups.  Furthermore, a               user may build and send a domain query to any desired               DNS server.                    MECHANISM               The tool works by using the echo service feature of               ICMP.  It reports if it receives an incorrect response               or no response.                    CAVEATS               Depending on the frequency of pinging and the number of               hosts pinged, netmon could create a high volume of               traffic.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               A PC, and a Western Digital WD8003 interface card (or               any other card for which there is a packet driver for               FTP Software Inc.'s PC/TCP kernel).  Both monochrome               and color displays are supported, though color is               recommended.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               DOS operating system, and the PC/TCP Kernel by FTP               Software, Inc.                    AVAILABILITY               The BYU modified version is available for anonymous FTP               from Dcsprod.byu.edu, in directory "programs."  It can               be freely distributed for non-commercial use.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 63]

Internet Tool Catalog                            NETMON (II)                              NAME               NETMON and iptrace                    KEYWORDS               traffic; IP; eavesdrop; UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               NETMON is a facility to enable communication of net-               working events from the BSD UNIX operating system to a               user-level network monitoring or management program.               Iptrace is a program interfacing to NETMON which logs               TCP-IP traffic for performance measurement and gateway               monitoring. It is easy to build other NETMON-based               tools using iptrace as a model.                         NETMON resides in the 4.3BSD UNIX kernel.  It is               independent of hardware-specific code in UNIX.  It is               transparent to protocol and network type, having no               internal assumptions about the network protocols being               recorded.  It is installed in BSD-like kernels by               adding a standard function call (probe) to a few points               in the input and output routines of the protocols to be               logged.                         NETMON is analogous to Sun Microsystems' NIT, but the               interface tap function is extended by recording more               context information.  Aside from the timestamp, the               choice of information recorded is up to the installer               of the probes.  The NETMON probes added to the BSD IP               code supplied with the distribution include as context:               input and output queue lengths, identification of the               network interface, and event codes labeling packet dis-               cards.  (The NETMON distribution is geared towards               measuring the performance of BSD networking protocols               in an IP gateway).                         NETMON is designed so that it can reside within the               monitored system with minimal interference to the net-               work processing.  The estimated and measured overhead               is around five percent of packet processing.                         The user-level tool "iptrace" is provided with NETMON.               This program logs IP traffic, either at IP-level only,               or as it passes through the network interface drivers               as well.  As a separate function, iptrace produces a               host traffic matrix output.  Its third type of output               is abbreviated sampling, in which only a pre-set number               of packets from each new host pair is logged.  TheIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 64]

Internet Tool Catalog                            NETMON (II)                                   three output types are configured dynamically, in any               combination.                         OSITRACE, another logging tool with a NETMON interface,               is available separately (and documented in a separate               entry in this catalog).                    MECHANISM               Access to the information logged by NETMON is through a               UNIX special file, /dev/netmon.  User reads are blocked               until the buffer reaches a configurable level of full-               ness.                         Several other parameters of NETMON can be tuned at com-               pile time.  A diagnostic program, netmonstat, is               included in the distribution.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               Bug reports and questions should be addressed to:                    ie-tools@gateway.mitre.org               Requests to join this mailing list:                    ie-tools-request@gateway.mitre.org               Questions and suggestions can also be directed to:                    Allison Mankin (703)883-7907                    mankin@gateway.mitre.org                    LIMITATIONS               A NETMON interface for tcpdump and other UNIX protocol               analyzers is not included, but it is simple to write.               NETMON probes for a promiscuous ethernet interface are               similarly not included.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               BSD UNIX-like network protocols or the ability to               install the BSD publicly available network protocols in               the system to be monitored.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 65]

Internet Tool Catalog                            NETMON (II)                                        AVAILABILITY               The NETMON distribution is available by anonymous FTP               in pub/netmon.tar or pub/netmon.tar.Z from aelred-               3.ie.org.  A short user's and installation guide,               NETMON.doc, is available in the same location.  The               NETMON distribution is provided "as is" and requires               retention of a copyright text in code derived from it.               It is copyrighted by the MITRE-Washington Networking               Center.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 66]

Internet Tool Catalog                          NETMON (III)                              NAME               NETMON -- an SNMP-based network management tool from               SNMP Research.                    KEYWORDS               alarm, control, manager, map, routing; DECnet, ether-               net, IP, OSI, ring, star; NMS, SNMP; DOS; sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               The NETMON application implements a network management               station based on a low-cost DOS-based platform.  It can               be successfully used with many types of networks,               including both wide area networks and those based on               various LAN media.  NETMON has been used with multipro-               tocol devices including those which support TCP/IP,               DECnet, and OSI protocols.  The fault management tool               displays the map of the network configuration with               current node and link state indicated in one of several               colors.  Alarms may be enabled to alert the operator of               events occurring in the network.  Events are logged to               disk.  The NETMON application comes complete with               source code including a powerful set of portable               libraries for generating and parsing SNMP messages.               Output data from NETMON may be transferred via flat               files for additional report generation by a variety of               statistical packages.                    MECHANISM               The NETMON application is based on the Simple Network               Management Protocol (SNMP).  Polling is performed via               the powerful SNMP get-next operator and the SNMP get               operator.  Trap directed polling is used to regulate               the focus and intensity of the polling.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               The monitored and managed nodes must implement the SNMP               over UDP perRFC 1098 or must be reachable via a proxy               agent.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               The minimum system is a IBM Personal Computer (4.77               MHz) with DOS 3.0 or later, an Enhanced GraphicsIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 67]

Internet Tool Catalog                          NETMON (III)                                   Adapter, Enhanced Graphics Monitor, a single 360 Kbyte               floppy drive, and an ethernet adapter.  However, most               users will find a hard disk to be helpful for storing               network history and will be less impatient with a fas-               ter CPU.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               DOS 3.0 or later and TCP/IP software from one of               several sources.                    AVAILABILITY               This is a commercial product available under license               from:                              SNMP Research                    P.O. Box 8593                    Knoxville, TN 37996-4800                    (615) 573-1434 (Voice)                    (615) 573-9197 (FAX)                    Attn:  Dr. Jeff CaseIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 68]

Internet Tool Catalog                                NETSTAT                              NAME               netstat                    KEYWORDS               routing; IP; UNIX, VMS; free.                    ABSTRACT               Netstat is a program that accesses network related data               structures within the kernel, then provides an ASCII               format at the terminal.  Netstat can provide reports on               the routing table, TCP connections, TCP and UDP               "listens", and protocol memory management.                    MECHANISM               Netstat accesses operating system memory to read the               kernel routing tables.                    CAVEATS               Kernel data structures can change while netstat is run-               ning.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               BSD UNIX or related OS, or VMS.                    AVAILABILITY               Available via anonymous FTP from uunet.uu.net, in               directory bsd-sources/src/ucb.  Available with 4.xBSD               UNIX and related operating systems.  For VMS, available               as part of TGV MultiNet IP software package, as well as               Wollongong's WIN/TCP.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 69]

Internet Tool Catalog                               NETWATCH                              NAME               netwatch                    KEYWORDS               traffic; ethernet, IP, ring; eavesdrop; DOS; free.                    ABSTRACT               PC/netwatch listens to an attached local broadcast net-               work and displays one line of information for every               packet that goes by.  This information consists of the               "to" and "from" local network addresses, the packet               length, the value of the protocol type field, and 8               selected contiguous bytes of the packet contents.               While netwatch is running it will respond to commands               to display collected information, change its operating               mode, or to filter for specific types of packets.                    MECHANISM               Puts controller in promiscuous mode.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               The monitor can handle a burst rate of about 200 pack-               ets per second.  Packets arriving faster than that are               missed (but counted in the statistics of the network               driver).  The display rate is about 25 packets per               second and there is a buffer that can hold 512               undisplayed packets.  The monitor discards overflow               packets.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               IBM PC compatible with CGA and network interface (3com               3C501, Interlan NI5010, or proNet p1300).                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               DOS 2.0 or higher, MicroSoft C (to generate custom exe-               cutables)IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 70]

Internet Tool Catalog                               NETWATCH                                        AVAILABILITY               Available as a utility program in the pcip distribution               from host husc6.harvard.edu, in directory pub/pcip.               Available in a standalone package via anonymous FTP               from windom.ucar.edu, in file pc/network/netwatch.arc;               a binary "dearc" program is also available from               windom.ucar.edu.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 71]

Internet Tool Catalog                   NETWORK INTEGRATOR I                              NAME               Network Integrator I                    KEYWORDS               map, traffic; ethernet; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               This tool monitors traffic on network segments.  All               information is dumped to either a log file or, for               real-time viewing, to a command tool window.  Data is               time-stamped according to date and time.  Logging can               continue for up to 24 hours.                         The tool is flexible in data collection and presenta-               tion.  Traffic filters can be specified according to               header values of numerous protocols, including those               used by Apple, DEC, Sun, HP, and Apollo.  Bandwidth               utilization can be monitored, as well as actual load               and peak throughput.  Additionally, the Network               Integrator can analyze a network's topology, and record               the location of all operational nodes on a network.                         Data can be displayed in six separate formats of bar               graphs.  In addition, there are several routines for               producing statistical summaries of the data collected.                    MECHANISM               The tools work through RPC and XDR calls.                    CAVEATS               Although the tool adds only little traffic to a net-               work, generation of statistics from captured files               requires a significant portion of a workstation's CPU.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               Must be root to run monitor.  There does not seem to be               a limit to the number of nodes, since it monitors by               segments.  The only major limitation is the amount of               disk space that a user can commit to the log files.               The size of the log files, however, can be controlled               through the tool's parameters.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Sun3 or Sun4.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 72]

Internet Tool Catalog                   NETWORK INTEGRATOR I                              SOFTWARE REQUIRED               4.0BSD UNIX or greater, or related OS.                    AVAILABILITY               Copyrighted, commercially available from               Network Integrators,               (408) 927-0412.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 73]

Internet Tool Catalog                            NET_MONITOR                              NAME               net_monitor                    KEYWORDS               routing, status; DECnet, IP; curses, ping; UNIX, VMS;               free, sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               Net_monitor uses ICMP echo (and DECnet reachability               information on VAX/VMS) to monitor a network.  The mon-               itoring is very simplistic, but has proved useful.  It               periodically tests whether hosts are reachable and               reports the results in a full-screen display.  It               groups hosts together in common sets.  If all hosts in               a set become unreachable, it makes a lot of racket with               bells, since it assumes that this means that some com-               mon piece of hardware that supports that set has               failed.  The periodicity of the tests, hosts to test,               and groupings of hosts are controlled with a single               configuration file.                         The idea for this program came from the PC/IP monitor               facility, but is an entirely different program with               different functionality.                    MECHANISM               Reachability is tested using ICMP echo facilities for               TCP/IP hosts (and DECnet reachability information on               VAX/VMS).  A DECnet node is considered reachable if it               appears in the list of hosts in a "show network" com-               mand issued on a routing node.                    CAVEATS               This facility has been found to be most useful when run               in a window on a workstation rather than on a terminal               connected to a host.  It could be useful if ported to a               PC (looks easy using FTP Software's programming               libraries), but this has not been done.  Curses is very               slow and cpu intensive on VMS, but the tool has been               run in a window on a VAXstation 2000.  Just don't try               to run it on a terminal connected to a 11/750.                    BUGS               None known.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 74]

Internet Tool Catalog                            NET_MONITOR                                        LIMITATIONS               This tool is not meant to be a replacement for a more               comprehensive network management facility such as is               provided with SNMP.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               A host with a network connection.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Curses, 4.xBSD UNIX socket programming libraries (lim-               ited set) and some flavor of TCP/IP that supports ICMP               echo request (ping).  It has been run on VAX/VMS run-               ning WIN/TCP and several flavors of 4BSD UNIX (includ-               ing SunOS 3.2, 4.0, and 4.3BSD).  It could be ported to               any platform that provides a BSD-style programming li-               brary with an ICMP echo request facility and curses.                    AVAILABILITY               Requests should be sent to the author:                         Dale Smith               Asst Dir of Network Services               University of Oregon               Computing Center               Eugene, OR  97403-1211                         Internet: dsmith@oregon.uoregon.edu.               BITNET: dsmith@oregon.bitnet               UUCP: ...hp-pcd!uoregon!dsmith               Voice: (503)686-4394                         With the source code, a makefile is provided for most               any UNIX box and a VMS makefile compatible with the               make distributed with PMDF.  A VMS DCL command file is               also provided, for use by those VMS sites without               "make."                         The author will attempt to fix bugs, but no support is               promised.  The tool is copyrighted, but free (for now).IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 75]

Internet Tool Catalog                               NFSWATCH                              NAME               nfswatch                    KEYWORDS               traffic; ethernet, IP, NFS; curses, eavesdrop; UNIX;               free.                    ABSTRACT               Nfswatch monitors all incoming ethernet traffic to an               NFS file server and divides it into several categories.               The number and percentage of packets received in each               category is displayed on the screen in a continuously               updated display.                         All exported file systems are monitored by default.               Other files may optionally be monitored.  Options also               allow monitoring of traffic destined for a remote host               instead of the local host, or monitoring traffic sent               by a single host.  Items such as the sample interval               length can be adjusted either on the command line or               interactively.  Facilities for taking screen               "snapshots," saving all data to a log file, and summar-               izing the log file are included.  Nfslogsum, a program               that summarizes the log file, is included in the dis-               tribution.                    MECHANISM               Nfswatch uses the Network Interface Tap in promiscuous               mode to monitor the ethernet.  It filters out NFS pack-               ets destined for the local (or remote) host, and then               decodes the file handles in order to determine which               file or file system a request pertains to.                    CAVEATS               Because the NFS file handle is a non-standard (server               private) piece of data, the file system monitoring part               of the program will break whenever the format of a file               handle is not what it expects to see.  This is easily               fixed in the code, however.  The code presently under-               stands SunOS 4.0 file handles.                    BUGS               None known.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 76]

Internet Tool Catalog                               NFSWATCH                                        LIMITATIONS               Up to 256 exported file systems and 256 individual               files can be monitored, but only (2 * (DisplayLines -               16)) will be displayed on the screen (all data will be               written to the log file).                         Only NFS requests made by client machines are counted;               the NFS traffic generated by the server in response to               these requests is not counted.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Has been tested on Sun-3 and Sun-4 systems.  No               hardware dependencies, but see below.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               SunOS 4.0 or higher.  The STREAMS NIT device is used.               Fairly easy code modifications should be able to make               it run under older SunOS releases, or other versions of               BSD UNIX with a NIT-like device.                    AVAILABILITY               Copyrighted, but freely distributable.  Available via               anonymous FTP from hosts icarus.riacs.edu and               spam.itstd.sri.com in pub/nfswatch.tar.Z.  There should               also be a copy on the 1989 Sun User's Group tape.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 77]

Internet Tool Catalog                              NHFSSTONE                              NAME               nhfsstone                    KEYWORDS               benchmark, generator; NFS; spoof; UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               Nhfsstone (pronounced n-f-s-stone, the "h" is silent)               is an NFS benchmarking program.  It is used on an NFS               client to generate an artificial load with a particular               mix of NFS operations.  It reports the average response               time of the server in milliseconds per call and the               load in calls per second.  The nhfsstone distribution               includes a script, "nhfsnums" that converts test               results into plot(5) format so that they can be graphed               using graph(1) and other tools.                    MECHANISM               Nhfsstone is an NFS traffic generator.  It adjusts its               calling patterns based on the client's kernel NFS               statistics and the elapsed time.  Load can be generated               over a given time or number of NFS calls.                    CAVEATS               Nhfsstone will compete for system resources with other               applications.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               4.xBSD-based UNIX                    AVAILABILITY               Available via anonymous FTP from bugs.cs.wisc.edu.               Alternatively, Legato Systems will provide the program               free of charge, if certain conditions are met.  Send               name and both email and U.S. mail addresses to:                    Legato Systems, Inc.                    Nhfsstone                    260 Sheridan Avenue                    Palo Alto, California  94306IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 78]

Internet Tool Catalog                              NHFSSTONE                                             A mailing list is maintained for regular information               and bug fixes: nhfsstone@legato.com or               uunet!legato.com!nhfsstone.  To join the list:               nhfsstone-request@legato.com or               uunet!legato.com!nhfsstone-request.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 79]

Internet Tool Catalog                                    NMC                              NAME               NMC -- the Hughes LAN Systems 9100 Network Management               Center                    KEYWORDS               control, manager, routing, status, traffic; bridge,               DECnet, ethernet, IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               The 9100 Network Management Center provides the capa-               bility to manage and control standards-based networking               products from Hughes LAN Systems' and other vendors.               This management extends to all network products that               are equipped with the industry standard SNMP (Simple               Network Management Protocol).  A comprehensive rela-               tional database manages the data and ensures easy               access and control of resources throughout the network.                         9100 NMC software provides the following functions:                         Database Management                    Stores and retrieves the information required to                    administer and configure the network.  It can be                    used to:                         Store and recall configuration data for all                         devices.                         Provide availability history for devices.                         Provides full-function SQL interface.                         Assign new internet addresses.                         Provide administrative information such as                         physical location of devices, person respon-                         sible, maintenance history, asset data,                         hardware/software versions, etc.                         Configuration Management                    A comprehensive configuration model that enables                    you to:                         Retrieve configuration information from SNMP                         devices.                         Configure HLS devices using SNMP.                         Configures attributes relating to TCP/IP,                         DECnet and other protocols in HLS devices                         using SNMP.                         Poll devices to compare their current attri-                         bute values with those in the database and                         produce reports of the discrepancies.                         Collect data about the state of the network.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 80]

Internet Tool Catalog                                    NMC                                             Performance Management                    Displays local network traffic graphically, by                    packet size, protocol, network utilization,                    sources and destinations of packets, etc.                         Fault Management                    Provides availability monitoring and indicates                    potential problems.                         Scheduled availability monitoring of devices.                         SNMP traps (alarms) are recorded in an alarm                         log.                         New alarms are indicated by a flashing icon                         and optional audio alert.                         Possible causes and suggested actions for the                         alarms are listed.                         Cumulative reports can be produced.                         Utilities Function                    Allows you to view and/or stop existing NMC                    processes, and to define schedules for invoking                    NMC applications and database maintenance utili-                    ties.                    MECHANISM               SNMP.                    CAVEATS               None reported.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               Maximum number of nodes that can be monitored is               18,000.  This can include Hosts, Terminal Servers, PCs,               and Bridges.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               The host for the NMC software is a Sun 3 desktop works-               tation.  Recommended minimum hardware is the Sun 3/80               Color with a 1/4" SCSI tape drive.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               The NMC, which is provided on 1/4" tape format, runs on               the Sun 4.0 Operating System.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 81]

Internet Tool Catalog                                    NMC                                        AVAILABILITY               A commercial product of:                    Hughes LAN Systems Inc.                    1225 Charleston Road                    Mountain View, CA 94043                    Phone: (415) 966-7300                    Fax: (415) 960-3738                    RCA Telex: 276572IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 82]

Internet Tool Catalog                                 NNSTAT                              NAME               NNStat                    KEYWORDS               manager, status, traffic; ethernet, IP; eavesdrop, NMS;               UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               NNStat is a collection of programs that provides an               internet statistic collecting capability.  The NNStat               strategy for statistic collection is to collect traffic               statistics via a promiscuous ethernet tap on the local               networks, versus instrumenting the gateways.  If all               traffic entering or leaving a network or set of net-               works traverses a local ethernet, then by stationing a               statistic gathering agent on each local network a pro-               file of network traffic can be gathered.  Statistical               data is retrieved from the local agents by a global               manager.                         A program called "statspy" performs the data gathering               function.  Essentially, statspy reads all packets on an               ethernet interface and records all information of               interest.  Information of interest is gathered by exa-               mining each packet and determining if the source or               destination IP address is one that is being monitored,               typically a gateway address.  If so then the contents               of the packet are examined to see if they match further               criteria.                         A program called "collect" performs global data collec-               tion.  It periodically polls various statspy processes               in the domain of interest to retrieve locally logged               statistical data.                         The NNSTAT distribution comes with several sample awk               programs which process the logged output of the collect               program.                    MECHANISM               Local agents (statspy processes) collect raw traffic               data via a promiscuous ethernet tap.  Statistical, fil-               tered or otherwise reduced data is retrieved from the               local agents by a global manager (the "collect" pro-               cess).                    CAVEATS               None.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 83]

Internet Tool Catalog                                 NNSTAT                                        BUGS               Bug fixes, extensions, and other pointers are discussed               in the electronic mail forum, bytecounters.  To join,               send a request to bytecounters-request@venera.isi.edu.               Forum exchanges are archived in the file               bytecounters/bytecounters.mail, available via anonymous               FTP from venera.isi.edu.                    LIMITATIONS               NNStat presumes a topology of one or more long haul               networks gatewayed to local ethernets.                         A kernel mod required to run with SunOS4.  These mods               are described in the bytecounters archive.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Ethernet interface.  Sun 3, Sun 4 (SPARC), or PC RT               workstation.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Distribution is for BSD UNIX, could easily be adapted               to any UNIX with promiscuous ethernet support.                    AVAILABILITY               Distribution is available via anonymous FTP from               venera.isi.edu, in file pub/NNStat.tar.Z.  Documenta-               tion is in pub/NNStat.userdoc.ms.Z.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 84]

Internet Tool Catalog                                   NPRV                              NAME               NPRV -- IP Node/Protocol Reachability Verifier                    KEYWORDS               map, routing, status; IP; ping; VMS; free.                    ABSTRACT               NPRV is a full-screen, keypad-oriented utility that               runs under VAX/VMS.  It allows the user to quickly scan               through a user-defined list of IP addresses (or domain               names) and verify a node's reachability.  The node's               reachability is determined by performing an ICMP echo,               UDP echo and a TCP echo at alternating three second               intervals.  The total number of packets sent and               received are displayed, as well as the minimum, average               and maximum round-trip times (in milliseconds) for each               type of echo.  Additionally, a "trace route" function               is performed to determine the path from the local sys-               tem to the remote host.  Once all of the trace route               information has filled the screen, a "snapshot" of the               screen can be written to a text file.  Upon exiting the               utility, these text files can be used to generate a               logical network map showing host and gateway intercon-               nectivity.                    MECHANISM               The ICMP echo is performed by sending ICMP ECHO REQUEST               packets.  The UDP and TCP echoes are performed by con-               necting to the UDP/TCP echo ports (port number 7).  The               trace route information is compiled by sending alter-               nating ICMP ECHO REQUEST packets and UDP packets with               very large destination UDP port numbers (in two               passes).  Each packet is initially sent with a TTL               (time to live) of 1.  This should cause an ICMP TIME               EXCEEDED error to be generated by the first routing               gateway.  Then each packet is sent with a TTL of 2.               This should cause an ICMP TIME EXCEEDED error to be               generated by the second routing gateway.  Then each               packet is sent with a TTL of 3, and so on.  This pro-               cess continues until an ICMP ECHO REPLY or UDP PORT               UNREACHABLE is received.  This indicates that the               remote host has been reached and that the trace route               information is complete.                    CAVEATS               This utility sends one echo packet per second (ICMP,               UDP or TCP), as well as sending out one trace route               packet per second.  If a transmitted trace route packetIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 85]

Internet Tool Catalog                                   NPRV                                   is returned in less than one second, another trace               route packet is sent in 100 milliseconds.  This could               cause a significant amount of contention on the local               network.                    BUGS               None known.  Please report any discovered bugs to the               author at:                    Allen Sturtevant                    National Magnetic Fusion Energy Computer Center                    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory                    P.O. Box 808; L-561                    Livermore, CA  94550                    Phone : (415) 422-8266                    E-Mail: sturtevant@ccc.nmfecc.gov                    LIMITATIONS               The user is required to have SYSPRV privilege to per-               form the ICMP Echo and trace route functions.  The               utility will still run with this privilege disabled,               but only the UDP Echo and TCP Echo information will be               displayed.  This utility is written in C, but unfor-               tunately it cannot be easily ported over to UNIX since               many VMS system calls are used and all screen I/O is               done using the VMS Screen Management Routines.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Any network interface supported by TGV Incorporated's               MultiNet software.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               VAX/VMS V5.1+ and TGV Incorporated's MultiNet version               2.0.                    AVAILABILITY               For executables only, FTP to the ANONYMOUS account               (password GUEST) on CCC.NMFECC.GOV (128.55.128.30) and               GET the following files:                         [ANONYMOUS.PROGRAMS.NPRV]NPRV.DOC     (ASCII text)               [ANONYMOUS.PROGRAMS.NPRV]NPRV.EXE     (binary)               [ANONYMOUS.PROGRAMS.NPRV]SAMPLE.IPA   (ASCII text)IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 86]

Internet Tool Catalog                               NSLOOKUP                              NAME               nslookup                    KEYWORDS               status; DNS; spoof; UNIX, VMS; free.                    ABSTRACT               Nslookup is a program used for interactive query of               ARPA Internet domain servers.  This program is useful               for diagnosing routing or mail delivery problems, where               often a local domain server is responding with an               incorrect internet address.  It is essentially a data-               base front end which converts user queries into domain               name queries.  By default nslookup queries the local               domain name server but you can specify additional               servers.  Additional information beyond the mapping of               domain names to internet addresses is possible.                    MECHANISM               Formats and sends domain name queries.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None known.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               BSD UNIX or related OS, or VMS.                    AVAILABILITY               Nslookup is part of the "named" distribution, available               via anonymous FTP from uunet.uu.net, in directories               bsd-sources/src/etc and bsd-sources/src/network, and               part of the "bind" distribution, available via               anonymous FTP from ucbarpa.berkeley.edu, in directory               4.3.  Also available with 4.xBSD UNIX and related               operating systems.  For VMS, available as part of TGV               MultiNet IP software package, as well as Wollongong's               WIN/TCP.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 87]

Internet Tool Catalog                                 OSILOG                              NAME               osilog -- OSI event Logger                    KEYWORDS               alarm, manager; OSI; UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               The osilog program receives management event reports               for the operation of the ISODE Transport layer (ISO               Transport Protocol class 0) on one or more managed sys-               tems, formats them suitably to facilitate post-               processing and records them for future analysis.                    MECHANISM               It communicates with the System Management Agents               (SMAs) on the selected systems via CMIP.                    CAVEATS               The System Management Agent (SMA) must be running on               the hosts selected to provide management reports.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               ISODE Transport Layer only supported by the SMA at               present.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed and tested on Sun3.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               The ISODE protocol suite, BSD UNIX.                    AVAILABILITY               The osilog and related tools, known as OSIMIS (OSI               Management Information Service), are publicly available               from University College London, England via FTP and               FTAM.  To obtain information regarding a copy send               email to gknight@ac.ucl.cs.uk or call +44 1 380 7366.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 88]

Internet Tool Catalog                                 OSIMIC                              NAME               osimic -- OSI Microscope                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; OSI; UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               The osimic program is a human user interface to the               management information base on the ISODE Transport               layer (ISO Transport Protocol class 0).  It allows               browsing through the management information tree and               enables the manipulation of attribute values.  It is               implemented using the SunView package of the SunTools               window system.                    MECHANISM               It communicates with the System Management Agent (SMA)               on the selected system via CMIP.                    CAVEATS               The System Management Agent (SMA) must be running on               the host where the mib is being examined.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               ISODE Transport Layer only supported by the SMA at               present.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed and tested on Sun3.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               The ISODE protocol suite, BSD UNIX, SunView/SunTools.                    AVAILABILITY               The osimic and related tools, known as OSIMIS (OSI               Management Information Service), are publicly available               from University College London, England via FTP and               FTAM.  To obtain information regarding a copy send               email to gknight@ac.ucl.cs.uk or call +44 1 380 7366.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 89]

Internet Tool Catalog                                 OSIMON                              NAME               osimon -- OSI Monitor                    KEYWORDS               manager, status, traffic; OSI; curses; UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               The osimon program monitors activity of the ISODE Tran-               sport layer (ISO Transport Protocol class 0), display-               ing entries for the active transport entities and con-               nections.  The display is dynamically updated in the               case of significant events such as connection opening               and closing and packet traffic, as information is               received in the form of event reports from a SMA.  It               uses the UNIX curses package for screen management.                    MECHANISM               It communicates with the System Management Agent (SMA)               on the selected system via CMIP.                    CAVEATS               The System Management Agent (SMA) must be running on               the host being monitored.                    BUGS               For the terminal type Sun, there are some transient               problems with the display.                    LIMITATIONS               ISODE Transport Layer only supported at present.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed and tested on Sun3 for various terminal               types.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               The ISODE protocol suite, BSD UNIX.                    AVAILABILITY               The osimon and related tools, known as OSIMIS (OSI               Management Information Service), are publicly available               from University College London, England via FTP and               FTAM.  To obtain information regarding a copy send               email to gknight@ac.ucl.cs.uk or call +44 1 380 7366.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 90]

Internet Tool Catalog                               OSITRACE                              NAME               OSITRACE                    KEYWORDS               traffic; OSI; eavesdrop; UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               OSITRACE is a network performance tool that displays               information about ISO TP4 connections.  One line of               output is displayed for each packet indicating the               time, source, destination, length, packet type,               sequence number, credit, and any optional parameters               contained in the packet.  Numerous options are avail-               able to control the output of OSITRACE.                         To obtain packets to analyze, OSITRACE uses Sun               Microsystems' Network Interface Tap (NIT) in SunOS 3.4,               3.5, and 4.0.X.  OSITRACE may also obtain data from the               NETMON utility which is described as another tool               entry.                         In Sun systems, OSITRACE may be easily installed: OSI               kernel support is not needed, nor is any other form of               OSI software support.                    MECHANISM               This tool has been designed in such a way that code to               process different protocol suites may be easily added.               As such, OSITRACE also has the ability to trace the DOD               TCP protocols.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               Bug reports and questions should be addressed to: ie-               tools@gateway.mitre.org                         Requests to join this mailing list: ie-tools-               request@gateway.mitre.org                         Questions and suggestions can also be directed to: Greg               Hollingsworth, gregh@gateway.mitre.org                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 91]

Internet Tool Catalog                               OSITRACE                                        HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restriction.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               SunOS 3.4, 3.5, or 4.0.X, or BSD UNIX-like network pro-               tocols with NETMON installed.                    AVAILABILITY               OSITRACE is copyrighted by the MITRE-Washington Net-               working Center, but freely distributed "as is."  It re-               quires retention of a copyright text in code derived               from it.  The distribution is available by anonymous               FTP in pub/pdutrace.tar or pub/pdutrace.tar.Z from               aelred-3.ie.org.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 92]

Internet Tool Catalog                               OVERVIEW                              NAME               OverVIEW                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP; DOS.                    ABSTRACT               Network and internet monitor; Performance monitor;               Fully Graphic user interface; Event logging; TFTP boot               server                    MECHANISM               OverVIEW uses SNMP to query routers, gateways and               hosts.  Also supports SGMP, PING and is committed to               CMIP/CMOT.  The SNMP queries allow dynamic determina-               tion of configuration and state.  Sets of related               queries allows monitoring of congestion and faults.               The hardware and software are sold as an integrated               package.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               256 nodes, 256 nets                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               80286, 640K, EGA, mouse.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               MS-DOS, OverVIEW, Network kernel, Mouse driver, SNMP               agents for monitored devices.                    AVAILABILITY               Fully supported product of Proteon, Inc.  For more               information, contact:                   Proteon, Inc.             Phone: (508) 898-2800                   2 Technology Drive        Fax:   (508) 366-8901                   Westborough, MA  01581    Telex: 928124IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 93]

Internet Tool Catalog                                   PING                              NAME               ping                    KEYWORDS               generator, status; IP; ping; DOS, UNIX, VMS; free.                    ABSTRACT               Ping is perhaps the most basic tool for internet               management.  It verifies that a remote IP implementa-               tion and the intervening networks and interfaces are               functional.  It can be used to measure round trip               delay.  Numerous versions of the ping program exist.                    MECHANISM               Ping is based on the ICMP ECHO_REQUEST message.                    CAVEATS               If run repeatedly, ping could generate high system               loads.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               PC/TCP's ping is the only implementation known support               both loose and strict source routing.  Though some ping               implementations support the ICMP "record route"               feature, the usefulness of this option for debugging               routes is limited by the fact that many gateways do not               correctly implement it.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               None.                    AVAILABILITY               Ping is widely included in TCP/IP distributions.  Pub-               lic domain versions of ping are available via anonymous               FTP from uunet.uu.net, in directory bsd-               sources/src/etc, and from venera.isi.edu, in directory               pub.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 94]

Internet Tool Catalog                                 PROXYD                              NAME               proxyd -- SNMP proxy agent daemons from SNMP Research.                    KEYWORDS               control, status; bridge, ethernet, IP, ring, star; NMS,               SNMP; UNIX; library, sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               SNMP proxy agents may be used to permit the monitoring               and controlling of network elements which are otherwise               not addressable using the SNMP management protocol               (e.g., a network bridge that implements a proprietary               management protocol).  Similarly, SNMP proxy agents may               be used to protect SNMP agents from redundant network               management agents through the use of caches.  Finally,               SNMP proxy agents may be used to implement elaborate               MIB access policies.  The proxy agent daemon listens               for SNMP queries and commands from logically remote               network management stations, translates and retransmits               those as appropriate network management queries or               cache lookups, listens for and parses the responses,               translates the responses into SNMP responses, and               returns those responses as SNMP messages to the network               management station that originated the transaction.               The proxy agent daemon also emits SNMP traps to identi-               fied trap receivers.  The proxy agent daemon is archi-               tected to make the addition of additional vendor-               specific variables a straight-forward task.  The proxy               application comes complete with source code including a               powerful set of portable libraries for generating and               parsing SNMP messages and a set of command line utili-               ties.                    MECHANISM               Network management variables are made available for               inspection and/or alteration by means of the Simple               Network Management Protocol (SNMP).                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               This application is a template for proxy application               writers.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 95]

Internet Tool Catalog                                 PROXYD                                   Only a few of the many LanBridge 100 variables are sup-               ported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               System from Sun Microsystems, Incorporated.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Sun OS 3.5 or 4.x                    AVAILABILITY               This is a commercial product available under license               from:                              SNMP Research                    P.O. Box 8593                    Knoxville, TN 37996-4800                    (615) 573-1434 (Voice)                    (615) 573-9197 (FAX)                    Attn:  Dr. Jeff CaseIETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 96]

Internet Tool Catalog                                  QUERY                              NAME               query, ripquery                    KEYWORDS               routing; IP; spoof; UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               Query allows remote viewing of a gateway's routing               tables.                    MECHANISM               Query formats and sends a RIP request or POLL command               to a destination gateway.                    CAVEATS               Query is intended to be used a a tool for debugging               gateways, not for network management.  SNMP is the pre-               ferred protocol for network management.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               The polled gateway must run RIP.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restriction.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               4.3BSD UNIX or related OS.                    AVAILABILITY               Available with routed and gated distributions.                         Routed may be obtained via anonymous FTP from               uunet.uu.net, in file bsd-               sources/src/network/routed.tar.Z.                         Gated may be obtained via anonymous FTP from               devvax.tn.cornell.edu.  Distribution files are in               directory pub/gated.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 97]

Internet Tool Catalog                                  SERAG                              NAME               SERAG -- the Simple Event Reporting and Alarm Genera-               tion tool                    KEYWORDS               alarm, security; ethernet, IP; NMS, proprietary; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               The Simple Event Reporting and Alarm Generation (SERAG)               collects error messages and other event reports from               servers on a LAN.  Any node with UDP/IP can be the               source of such messages/reports.  The logging of error               messages is integrated with the audit trail facility of               the Network Control Server (NCS) from 3COM.  Alarms are               generated on the NCS based on predefined conditions.               Alarms may be sent to the console of the NCS, logged in               a file, or routed via WAN to a service center.                         SERAG can automatically detect a predefined set of               errors in the servers and generate alarms.  The break-               down of a server in the LAN may also result in alarm               generation.                         SERAG creates an error log that can be used for post-               testing analysis.                    MECHANISM               The tool searches through the audit trail (error log)               files for events specified by the user.  The search may               be constrained to specific nodes in the network and to               a specific time frame.  Events may be combined into               conditions which are logical expressions (e.g., look               for eventA and eventB and not eventC within time frame               so and so).  This is an interactive query facility to               analyze the audit trail (error log).                         The user may also ask for such conditions to be checked               at regular intervals, and specify routing of error mes-               sages in case the condition is satisfied.  The checking               of such conditions is done by a daemon process running               in the background.                    CAVEATS               May impact the performance of the NCS if error logs are               big, or if conditions are computationally complex.                    BUGS               None known.IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 98]

Internet Tool Catalog                                  SERAG                                        LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               A workstation running UNIX.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Implemented in C (using lex and yacc) on a Sun 3/50.               Also runs under Xenix.  Should work with most versions               of UNIX.                    AVAILABILITY               Developed jointly by ELAB-RUNIT and Norsk Data:                              Tor Didriksen, Ole-Hjalmar Kristensen, Steinar                    Haug,                    Eldfrid Oefsti Oevstedal, Tor Staalhane                    ELAB-RUNIT                    N-7034 Trondheim                    Norway                              phone: +47 7 593000                    fax  : +47 7 532586                    email: didrik@idt.unit.no                      sthaug@idt.unit.no                      kristensen@vax.runit.unit.no                         Commercially available from:                    Norsk Data A/S                    P.O. Box 25, Bogerud                    N-0621 Oslo 6                    Norway                    ref: network management/security management/fault                    management                              phone: +47 2 627500                    fax  : +47 2 296796IETF NOCTools Working Group                        [Page 99]

Internet Tool Catalog                                    SMA                              NAME               sma -- OSI System Management Agent                    KEYWORDS               alarm, manager, status; OSI; UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               The sma is a CMIP agent which runs on BSD UNIX and pro-               vides access to management information on the operation               of the ISODE transport layer (ISO Transport Protocol               class 0).  It also supports the sending of event               reports.  Activity can be recorded in a log file.                    MECHANISM               The sma communicates with the active ISODE transport               entities using UNIX UDP sockets in order to receive the               management information which is made available to other               manager processes via CMIP.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               ISODE Transport Layer only supported at present.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun3, tested on Sun3 and VAXStation.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               The ISODE protocol suite, BSD UNIX.                    AVAILABILITY               The sma and related tools, known as OSIMIS (OSI Manage-               ment Information Service), are publicly available from               University College London, England via FTP and FTAM.               To obtain information regarding a copy send email to               gknight@ac.ucl.cs.uk or call +44 1 380 7366.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 100]

Internet Tool Catalog                                SNIFFER                              NAME               Sniffer                    KEYWORDS               analyzer, generator, traffic; DECnet, ethernet, IP,               NFS, OSI, ring, SMTP, star; eavesdrop; standalone.                    ABSTRACT               The Network General Sniffer is a protocol analyzer for               performing LAN diagnostics, monitoring, traffic genera-               tion, and troubleshooting.  The Sniffer protocol               analyzer has the capability of capturing every packet               on a network and of decoding all seven layers of the               OSI protocol model.  Capture frame selection is based               on several different filters: protocol content at lower               levels; node addresses; pattern matching (up to 8               logically-related patterns of 32 bytes each); and des-               tination class.  Users may extend the protocol               interpretation capability of the Sniffer by writing               their own customized protocol interpreters and linking               them to the Sniffer software.                         The Sniffer displays network traffic information and               performance statistics in real time, in user-selectable               formats.  Numeric station addresses are translated to               symbolic names or manufacturer ID names.  Network               activities measured include frames accepted, Kbytes               accepted, and buffer use.  Each network version has               additional counters for activities specific to that               network.  Network activity is expressed as               frames/second, Kbytes/second, or per cent of network               bandwidth utilization.                         Data collection by the Sniffer may be output to printer               or stored to disk in either print-file or spread-sheet               format.                         Protocol suites understood by the Sniffer include:               Banyan Vines, IBM Token-Ring, Novell Netware, XNS/MS-               Net (3Com 3+), DECnet, TCP/IP (including SNMP and               applications-layer protocols such as FTP, SMTP, and               TELNET), X Windows (for X version 11), NFS, and several               SUN proprietary protocols (including mount, pmap, RPC,               and YP).  Supported LANs include: ethernet, Token-ring               (4Mb and 16Mb versions), ARCNET, StarLAN, IBM PC Net-               work (Broadband), and Apple Localtalk Network.                    MECHANISMIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 101]

Internet Tool Catalog                                SNIFFER                                   The Sniffer is a self-contained, portable protocol               analyzer that require only AC line power and connection               to a network to operate.  Normally passive (except when               in Traffic Generator mode), it captures images of all               or of selected frames in a working buffer, ready for               immediate analysis and display.                         The Sniffer is a standalone device.  Two platforms are               available: one for use with single network topologies,               the other for use with multi-network topologies.  Both               include Sniffer core software, a modified network               interface card (or multiple cards), and optional proto-               col interpreter suites.                         All Sniffer functions may be remotely controlled from a               modem-connected PC.  Output from the Sniffer can be               imported to database or spreadsheet packages.                    CAVEATS               In normal use, the Sniffer is a passive device, and so               will not adversely effect network performance.  Perfor-               mance degradation will be observed, of course, if the               Sniffer is set to Traffic Generator mode and connected               to an active network.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               None.  The Sniffer is a self-contained unit, and               includes its own interface card.  It installs into a               network as would any normal workstation.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               None.                    AVAILABILITY               The Sniffer is available commercially.  For information               on your local representative, call or write:                              Network General Corporation 4200 Bohannon Drive                    Menlo Park, CA  94025 Phone: (415) 688-2700 Fax:                    415-321-0855                         For acquisition by government agencies, the Sniffer isIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 102]

Internet Tool Catalog                                SNIFFER                                   included on the GSA schedule.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 103]

Internet Tool Catalog                   SNMP DEVELOPMENT KIT                              NAME               The SNMP Development Kit                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX; free, sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               The SNMP Development Kit comprises C Language source               code for a programming library that facilitates access               to the management services of the SNMP (RFC 1098).               Sources are also included for a few simple client               applications whose main purpose is to illustrate the               use of the library.  Example client applications query               remote SNMP agents in a variety of modes, and generate               or collect SNMP traps.  Code for an example SNMP agent               that supports a subset of the Internet MIB (RFC 1066)               is also included.                    MECHANISM               The Development Kit facilitates development of SNMP-               based management applications -- both clients and               agents.  Example applications execute SNMP management               operations according to the values of command line               arguments.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               Fixed in the next release.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               The SNMP library source code is highly portable and               runs on a wide range of platforms.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               The SNMP library source code has almost no operating               system dependencies and runs in a wide range of               environments.  Certain portions of the example SNMP               agent code are specific to the 4.3BSD implementation of               the UNIX system for the DEC MicroVAX.                    AVAILABILITY               The Development Kit is available via anonymous FTP from               host allspice.lcs.mit.edu.  The copyright for theIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 104]

Internet Tool Catalog                   SNMP DEVELOPMENT KIT                                   Development Kit is held by the Massachusetts Institute               of Technology, and the Kit is distributed without               charge according to the terms set forth in its code and               documentation.  The distribution takes the form of a               UNIX tar file.                         Bug reports, questions, suggestions, or complaints may               be mailed electronically to snmp-dk@ptt.lcs.mit.edu,               although no response in any form is guaranteed.  Dis-               tribution via UUCP mail may be arranged by contacting               the same address.  Requests for hard-copy documentation               or copies of the distribution on magnetic media are               never honored.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 105]

Internet Tool Catalog                         SNMP LIBRARIES                              NAME               Snmp Libraries and Utilities from SNMP Research.                    KEYWORDS               alarm, control, manager, map, routing, status; bridge,               DECnet, ethernet, IP, OSI, ring, star; NMS, SNMP; DOS,               UNIX, VMS; sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               The SNMP Libraries and Utilities serve two purposes:                         1)   to act as building blocks for the construction of                    SNMP-based agent and manager applications; and                         2)   to act as network management tools for network                    fire fighting and report generation.                         The libraries perform ASN.1 parsing and generation               tasks for both network management station applications               and network management agent applications.  These               libraries hide the details of ASN.1 parsing and genera-               tion from application writers and make it unnecessary               for them to be expert in these areas.  The libraries               are very robust with considerable error checking               designed in.  The several command line utilities               include applications for retrieving one or many vari-               ables, retrieving tables, or effecting commands via the               setting of remote network management variables.                    MECHANISM               The parsing is performed via recursive descent methods.               Messages are passed via the Simple Network Management               Protocol (SNMP).                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 106]

Internet Tool Catalog                         SNMP LIBRARIES                                        HARDWARE REQUIRED               This software has been ported to a wide range of sys-               tems, too numerous to itemize.  It includes worksta-               tions, general purpose timesharing systems, and embed-               ded hardware in intelligent network devices such as re-               peaters, bridges, and routers.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               C compiler, TCP/IP library from a variety of sources.                    AVAILABILITY               This is a commercial product available under license               from:                              SNMP Research                    P.O. Box 8593                    Knoxville, TN 37996-4800                    (615) 573-1434 (Voice)                    (615) 573-9197 (FAX)                    Attn:  Dr. Jeff CaseIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 107]

Internet Tool Catalog                                SNMPASK                              NAME               snmpask                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpask is a network monitoring application which gath-               ers specific information from a single network entity               at regular intervals and stores this information into               UNIX flat files.  A report generation package is               included in the NYSERNet SNMP Software Distribution to               produce reports and graphs from the raw data.                    MECHANISM               Snmpask uses SNMP to gather its information.  The agent               which must be queried and the variables to query for               are specified in a configuration file.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running in the network entity               being monitored in order for snmpask to be useful.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               SNMP polling is done synchronously.  Only a single               agent can be polled per snmpask process.  Only 16 vari-               ables can be requested per snmpask process.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpask is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software Dis-               tribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.  To               obtain information regarding the package send mail to:               snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 108]

Internet Tool Catalog                              SNMPD (I)                              NAME               snmpd                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpd is an SNMP agent which runs on UNIX derivatives               and answers network management queries from network               management stations supporting SNMP.  Snmpd also sup-               ports the sending of SNMP traps.                    MECHANISM               Snmpd conforms to SNMP as specified inRFC 1098.  Cer-               tain user configurable options are manipulated through               a simple configuration file.                    CAVEATS               UNIX does not support all of the MIB variables speci-               fied inRFC 1066.  Snmpd does the best it can to find               the answers.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               See CAVEATS.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpd is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software Dis-               tribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.  To               obtain information regarding the package send mail to:               snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 109]

Internet Tool Catalog                            SNMPD (II)                              NAME               snmpd -- an SNMP host/gateway agent daemon from SNMP               Research.                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; bridge, ethernet, IP, ring, star; NMS,               SNMP; DOS, UNIX; sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               The snmpd agent daemon listens for and responds to net-               work management queries and commands from logically               remote network management stations.  The agent daemon               also emits SNMP traps to identified trap receivers.               The agent daemon is architected to make the addition of               additional vendor-specific variables a straight-forward               task.  The snmpd application comes complete with source               code including a powerful set of portable libraries for               generating and parsing SNMP messages and a set of com-               mand line utilities.                    MECHANISM               Network management variables are made available for               inspection and/or alteration by means of the Simple               Network Management Protocol (SNMP).                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               Only the operating system variables available without               source code modifications to the operating system and               device device drivers are supported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               This software has been ported to a wide range of sys-               tems, too numerous to itemize.  It includes worksta-               tions, general purpose timesharing systems, and embed-               ded hardware in intelligent network devices such as               repeaters, bridges, and routers.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               C compiler, ".h" files for operating system.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 110]

Internet Tool Catalog                            SNMPD (II)                                        AVAILABILITY               This is a commercial product available under license               from:                              SNMP Research                    P.O. Box 8593                    Knoxville, TN 37996-4800                    (615) 573-1434 (Voice)                    (615) 573-9197 (FAX)                    Attn:  Dr. Jeff CaseIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 111]

Internet Tool Catalog                             SNMPLOOKUP                              NAME               snmplookup                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmplookup is a network monitoring application that               allows the interactive querying of a network entity.               Snmplookup mimics nslookup, the DNS interactive query               tool, in style and feel.                    MECHANISM               Snmplookup uses SNMP to gather its information.  The               network entity to be queried and the variable to be               retrieved can be entered from the command shell after               snmplookup is invoked.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running on the network entity               being monitored.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               See CAVEATS.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmplookup is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 112]

Internet Tool Catalog                            SNMPPERFMON                              NAME               snmpperfmon                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; curses, NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpperfmon is a network monitoring application based               on the Berkeley curses terminal graphics package and               the Simple Network Management Protocol.  The applica-               tion monitors certain interface statistics from a sin-               gle agent and displays them in tabular form on a stan-               dard terminal screen.                    MECHANISM               Snmpperfmon uses SNMP to gather its information.  The               agent to be queried is specified on the command line.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running in the network entity               being monitored in order for snmpperfmon to be useful.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               SNMP polling is done synchronously.  Only the predeter-               mined (read "hard coded") interface statistics can be               displayed.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.  The "curses" library.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpperfmon is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 113]

Internet Tool Catalog                               SNMPPOLL                              NAME               snmppoll                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmppoll is a network monitoring application which               gathers specific information from a network at regular               intervals and stores this information into UNIX flat               files.  A report generation package is included in the               NYSERNet SNMP Software Distribution to produce reports               and graphs of raw data collected via SNMP.                    MECHANISM               Snmppoll uses SNMP to gather its information.  The               agents which must be queried and the variables to query               for are specified in a configuration file.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running in the network entity               being monitored in order for snmppoll to be useful.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               SNMP polling is done synchronously.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmppoll is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 114]

Internet Tool Catalog                              SNMPQUERY                              NAME               snmpquery                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpquery is a network monitoring application which               allows the simple query of a single network entity from               the command line.                    MECHANISM               Snmpquery uses SNMP to gather its information.  The               entity to be monitored and the variables to be               retrieved must be specified on the command line.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running on the network entity               being monitored.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               Only one network entity can be managed per invocation.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpquery is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 115]

Internet Tool Catalog                              SNMPROUTE                              NAME               snmproute                    KEYWORDS               manager, routing; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmproute is a network monitoring application that               allows the user to query for the entire routing table               or a single routing table entry from a network entity.                    MECHANISM               Snmproute uses SNMP to gather its information.  The               network entity to be queried and the destination net-               work to be queried for must be specified on the command               line.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running on the network entity               being monitored.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               Only one network entity can be queried per invocation.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmproute is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 116]

Internet Tool Catalog                                SNMPSET                              NAME               snmpset                    KEYWORDS               control, manager; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpset is a network management application that allows               the alteration of a single variable in a specific               agent.                    MECHANISM               Snmpset uses SNMP to alter the agent variables.  The               agent to which the set is directed and the variable to               alter must be specified on the command line.  The user               is prompted before any changes are made.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running in the network entity               being managed in order for snmpset to be useful.  In               addition, a read-write community must be configured on               the agent.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               Only one variable can be altered per invocation.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpset is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software Dis-               tribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.  To               obtain information regarding the package send mail to:               snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 117]

Internet Tool Catalog                                SNMPSRC                              NAME               snmpsrc                    KEYWORDS               manager, routing; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpsrc is a network monitoring application that starts               at a specified router in the network and traces the               path of a given destination network from the starting               router.                    MECHANISM               Snmpsrc uses SNMP to gather its information.  The               starting router and destination network must be speci-               fied on the command line.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running on all of the routers in               the path to the destination network in order for a com-               plete path to be reported back to the user.  The same               SNMP community must also be configured in every SNMP               agent in the path to the destination network.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               See CAVEATS.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpsrc is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software Dis-               tribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.  To               obtain information regarding the package send mail to:               snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 118]

Internet Tool Catalog                               SNMPSTAT                              NAME               snmpstat                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpstat is a network monitoring application that gath-               ers specific information from a network at regular               intervals and stores this information into a commercial               database.  A report generation package is included in               the NYSERNet SNMP Software Distribution to produce               reports and graphs of raw data collected via SNMP.                    MECHANISM               Snmpstat uses SNMP to gather its information.  The               agents which must be queried and the variables to query               for are specified in a configuration file.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running in the network entity               being monitored in order for snmpstat to be useful.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               SNMP polling is done synchronously.  Currently, Ingres               is the only commercial database supported.  SQL is the               query language being used.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpstat is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 119]

Internet Tool Catalog                              SNMPTRAPD                              NAME               snmptrapd                    KEYWORDS               alarm, manager; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmptrapd is an SNMP trap agent that runs on UNIX               derivatives.  It receives and logs traps which are gen-               erated from snmp agents.  A report generation package               is included in the NYSERNet SNMP Software Distribution               to produce reports and graphs of raw data collected via               SNMP.                    MECHANISM               Snmptrapd conforms to SNMP as specified inRFC 1098.               Certain user configurable options are manipulated               through a simple configuration file.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               Snmptrapd only logs traps into a UNIX flat file.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmptrapd is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 120]

Internet Tool Catalog                              SNMPWATCH                              NAME               snmpwatch                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpwatch is a network monitoring application that mon-               itors variables in a single network entity and reports               when they have changed value.                    MECHANISM               Snmpwatch uses SNMP to gather its information.  The               entity to be monitored and the variables to be watched               must be specified on the command line.  Once a value               changes, snmpwatch prints out the value and the vari-               able to the standard output.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running on the network entity               being monitored.  Upon invocation, the initial value of               each variable will printed out to the standard output.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               Only one network entity can be managed per invocation.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpwatch is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 121]

Internet Tool Catalog                               SNMPXBAR                              NAME               snmpxbar                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP, X; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpxbar is a network monitoring application based on               X-Windows Version 11 Release 2 and the Simple Network               Management Protocol.  The application monitors a single               numeric MIB object and displays its value in a bar               chart.  Snmpxbar supports color graphics.                    MECHANISM               Snmpxbar uses SNMP to gather its information.  The MIB               object to be graphed must be specified on the command               line.  The polling interval can be changed dynamically               from within snmpxbar.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running in the network entity               being monitored in order for snmpxbar to be useful.                    BUGS               Bugs are fixed as reports come in.  Report bugs to:               nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               Can only graph one numeric MIB object per invocation.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.  X-Windows.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpxbar is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 122]

Internet Tool Catalog                              SNMPXCONN                              NAME               snmpxconn                    KEYWORDS               manager, map, status; IP; NMS, SNMP, X; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpxconn is a network monitoring application based on               X-Windows Version 11 Release 2 and the Simple Network               Management Protocol.  The application monitors a number               of (configurable) network entities and graphically dep-               icts the TCP connections associated with the network               entities via a TCP topology map.                    MECHANISM               Snmpxconn uses SNMP to gather its information.  A con-               figuration file is used to determine the network enti-               ties to be monitored.  There are certain command line               arguments which manipulate the X environment and SNMP               actions.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running in the network entity               being monitored in order for snmpxconn to be useful.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               SNMP polling is done synchronously.  The network enti-               ties must be configured by manually adding information               to a configuration file.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.  X-Windows.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpxconn is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 123]

Internet Tool Catalog                               SNMPXMON                              NAME               snmpxmon                    KEYWORDS               manager, map, status; IP; NMS, SNMP, X; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpxmon is a network monitoring application based on               X-Windows Version 11 Release 2 and the Simple Network               Management Protocol.  This application will determine               the status of sites and links it is configured to moni-               tor (via its configuration file) by querying the desig-               nated sites and then displaying the result in a map               form.  Snmpxmon supports color graphics.                    MECHANISM               Snmpxmon uses SNMP to gather its information.  A confi-               guration file is used to design the topology map.               There are certain command line arguments which manipu-               late the X environment and SNMP actions.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running in the network entity               being monitored in order for snmpxmon to be useful.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               SNMP polling is done synchronously.  The topology map               must be configured by hand.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.  X-Windows.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpxmon is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 124]

Internet Tool Catalog                              SNMPXPERF                              NAME               snmpxperf                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; IP; NMS, SNMP, X; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpxperf is a network monitoring application based on               X-Windows Version 11 Release 2 and the Simple Network               Management Protocol.  The application monitors a single               numeric MIB object and displays its value in an EKG               style histogram.  Snmpxperf supports color graphics.                    MECHANISM               Snmpxperf uses SNMP to gather its information.  The MIB               object to be graphed must be specified on the command               line.  The polling interval can be changed dynamically               from within snmpxperf.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running in the network entity               being monitored in order for snmpxperf to be useful.                    BUGS               Auto-scaling sometimes doesn't downscale the EKG-graph               enough on large spikes.  This results in some of the               graph running into the button boxes at the top of the               window.  Generally, Bugs are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               Can only graph one numeric MIB object per invocation.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.  X-Windows.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpxperf is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 125]

Internet Tool Catalog                           SNMPXPERFMON                              NAME               snmpxperfmon                    KEYWORDS               manager, status, traffic; IP; NMS, SNMP, X; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpxperfmon is a network monitoring application based               on X-Windows Version 11 Release 2 and the Simple Net-               work Management Protocol.  The application monitors a               single Network Entity and displays graphical informa-               tion pertaining to the entities interface traffic               statistics.  Snmpxperfmon supports color graphics.                    MECHANISM               Snmpxperfmon uses SNMP to gather its information.  The               MIB agent to be polled must be specified on the command               line.  The agent is then queried about all of its               interfaces.  Four EKG-style graphs are constructed for               each interface (input pkts, output pkts, input Octets,               output Octets).                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running in the network entity               being monitored in order for snmpxperfmon to be useful.                    BUGS               Generally, bugs are fixed as reports come in.  Report               bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               Can only graph one network entity per invocation.  Can               only graph the amount of interfaces which will fit on a               single bitmap display.  Does not auto-scale or resize.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.  X-Windows.                    AVAILABILITY               Snmpxperfmon is available in the NYSERNet SNMP Software               Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted software.               To obtain information regarding the package send mail               to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 126]

Internet Tool Catalog                           SNMPXPERFMON                              NAME               snmpxrtmetric                    KEYWORDS               manager, routing; IP; NMS, SNMP, X; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Snmpxrtmetric is a network monitoring application based               on X-Windows Version 11 Release 2 and the Simple Net-               work Management Protocol.  The application monitors the               routing table of a specific agent and displays the RIP               routing metric of certain destination networks in bar               chart format.                    MECHANISM               Snmpxrtmetric uses SNMP to gather its information.  A               configuration file is used to determine which destina-               tion networks will be graphed.  The agent to be queried               is specified on the command line.  Snmpxrtmetrtic sup-               ports color graphics.                    CAVEATS               An SNMP agent must be running in the network entity               being monitored in order for snmpxrtmetric to be use-               ful.                    BUGS               None outstanding.  They are fixed as reports come in.               Report bugs to:  nysersnmp@nisc.nyser.net                    LIMITATIONS               SNMP polling is done synchronously.  The destination               networks must be configured by manually adding informa-               tion to a configuration file.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Developed on Sun 3/60, Sun 3/260, tested on a SPARCsta-               tion I, DECstation, and a Solbourne 4/802.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Some UNIX variant or some other OS with a Berkeley               Socket Compatibility Library.  The X window system.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 127]

Internet Tool Catalog                          SNMPXRTMETRIC                                        AVAILABILITY               Snmpxrtmetric is available in the NYSERNet SNMP               Software Distribution, which is licensed, copyrighted               software.  To obtain information regarding the package               send mail to: snmplisc@nisc.nyser.net or call +1 518-               283-8860.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 128]

Internet Tool Catalog                          SPIDERMONITOR                              NAME               SpiderMonitor P220, K220 and               SpiderAnalyzer P320, K320                    KEYWORDS               alarm, analyzer, generator, traffic; DECnet, ethernet,               IP, OSI; eavesdrop; standalone; sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               The SpiderMonitor and SpiderAnalyzer are protocol               analyzers for performing ethernet LAN diagnostics, mon-               itoring, traffic generation, and troubleshooting.  The               SpiderMonitor has the capability of capturing every               packet on a network and of decoding the first four               layers of the OSI protocol model.  The SpiderAnalyzer               has additional software for decoding higher protocol               layers.  Protocol suites understood: TCP/IP (including               SNMP and applications-layer protocols), OSI, XNS, DEC-               net and IPX.  User-definable decodes can be written in               'C' with the Microsoft version 5.0 'C' compiler.  A               decode guide is provided.                         The SpiderAnalyzer supports multiple simultaneous               filters for capturing packets using predefined patterns               and error states.  Filter patterns can also trigger on               NOT matching 1 or more filters, an alarm, or a speci-               fied time.                         The SpiderAnalyzer can also employ TDR (Time Domain               Reflectometry) to find media faults, open or short cir-               cuits, or transceiver faults.  It can transmit OSI,               XNS, and Xerox link-level echo packets to user-               specified stations, performs loop round tests.                         In traffic generation mode, the SpiderAnalyzer has the               ability to generate packets at random intervals of ran-               dom lengths or any combination of random or fixed               interval or length, generation of packets with CRC               errors, or packets that are too short, or packets that               are too long.                         Output from the SpiderMonitor/Analyzer can be imported               to database or spreadsheet packages.                    MECHANISM               The SpiderMonitor and Spider Analyzer are available as               stand-alone, IBM PC compatible packages based upon a               Compaq III portable system, or as a plug-in boards forIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 129]

Internet Tool Catalog                          SPIDERMONITOR                                   any IBM XT/AT compatible machine.  The model 220 (Spi-               derMonitor) systems provide a functional base suited               for most network management needs.  The model 320 (Spi-               derAnalyzer) systems provide extended functionality in               the development mode and traffic generation mode as               well more filtering capabilities than the 220 models.                    CAVEATS               Traffic generation will congest an operational ether-               net.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               Monitoring of up to 1024 stations and buffering of up               to 1500 packets.  The model 220 provides for 3 filters               with a filter depth of 46 bytes.  The model 320 pro-               vides for 4 filters and a second level of filtering               with a filter depth of 64 bytes.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               PX20s are self contained, the KX20s require an IBM               PC/XT-AT compatible machine with 5 megabytes of hard               disk storage and the spare slot into which the board               kit is plugged.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               None.  The SpiderAnalyzer requires the Microsoft 'C'               Compiler, Version 5.0 for writing user defined decodes.                    AVAILABILITY               The SpiderMonitor/Analyzer is available commercially.               For information on your local representative, call or               write:                              Spider Systems, Inc.                    12 New England Executive Park                    Burlington, MA  01803                    Telephone:  617-270-3510                    FAX:        617-270-9818IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 130]

Internet Tool Catalog                                  SPIMS                              NAME               SPIMS -- the Swedish Institute of Computer Science               (SICS) Protocol Implementation Measurement System tool.                    KEYWORDS               benchmark, debugger; IP, OSI; spoof; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               SPIMS is used to measure the performance of protocol               and "protocol-like" services including response time               (two-way delay), throughput and the time to open and               close connections.  It has been used to:                         o+    benchmark alternative protocol implementations,                         o+    observe how performance varies when parameters in                    specific implementations have been varied (i.e.,                    to tune parameters).                         SPIMS currently has interfaces to the DoD Internet Pro-               tocols: UDP, TCP, FTP, SunRPC, the OSI protocols from               the ISODE 4.0 distribution package: FTAM, ROSE, ISO TP0               and to Sunlink 5.2 ISO TP4 as well as Stanford's VMTP.               Also available are a rudimentary set of benchmarks,               stubs for new protocol interfaces and a user manual.               For an example of the use of SPIMS to tune protocols,               see:                    Nordmark & Cheriton, "Experiences from VMTP: How                    to achieve low response time,"IFIPWG6.1/6.4:ProtocolsforHigh-SpeedNetworks, May 1989,                    Zurich.  To be published.                    MECHANISM                         SPIMS runs as user processes and uses a TCP connection               for measurement set-up.  Measurements take place               between processes over the measured protocol.  SPIMS               generates messages and transfers them via the measured               protocol service according to a user-supplied specifi-               cation.  SPIMS has a unique measurement specification               language that is used to specify a measurement session.               In the language there are constructs for different               application types (e.g., bulk data transfer), for               specifying frequency and sequence of messages, for dis-               tribution over message sizes and for combining basic               specifications.  These specifications are independent               of both protocols and protocol implementations and can               be used for benchmarking.  For more details on theIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 131]

Internet Tool Catalog                                  SPIMS                                   internals of SPIMS, see:                    Nordmark & Gunningberg, "SPIMS: A Tool for Proto-                    col Implementation Performance Measurements"Proc.of13:thConf.onLocalComputerNetworks, Min-                    neapolis 1989, pp 222-229.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               SPIMS is implemented on UNIX, including SunOS 4.,               4.3BSD UNIX, DN (UNIX System V, with extensions) and               Ultrix 2.0/3.0.  It requires a TCP connection for meas-               urement set-up.  No kernel modifications or any modifi-               cations to measured protocols are required.                    AVAILABILITY               SPIMS is not in the public domain; the software is               covered by licenses.  The Swedish Institute of Computer               Science has released the research prototype of SPIMS               for research and non-commercial use.  Commercial organ-               izations may obtain the research prototype, but it is               for internal research only and for no commercial use               whatsoever. A commercial, supported version of SPIMS is               distributed by TeleLOGIC Uppsala AB, Sweden.                         For universities and non-profit organizations, SPIMS               source code is distributed free of charge.  There are               two ways to get the software:                         1.   FTP.  If you have an Internet FTP connection, you                    can use anonymous FTP to sics.se [192.16.123.90],                    and retrieve the file in pub/spims-                    dist/dist890915.tar.Z (this is a .6MB tar image)                    in BINARY mode.  Log in as user anonymous and at                    the password prompt, use your complete electronic                    mail address.                         2.   On a Sun 1/4-inch cartridge tape.  For mailing, aIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 132]

Internet Tool Catalog                                  SPIMS                                        handling fee of US$150.00 will be charged.  Submit                    a bank check with the request.  Do not send tapes                    or envelopes.                         For other organizations, the SPIMS source code for the               research prototype is distributed for a one-time fee of               US$500.00.  Organizations interested in the research               prototype need to contact SICS via email and briefly               motivate why they qualify (non-commercial use) for the               research prototype.  They will thereafter get a permis-               sion to obtain a copy from the same distribution source               as for universities.                         For more information about the research prototype dis-               tribution, contact:                              Swedish Institute of Computer Science                    Att: Birgitta Klingenberg                    P.O. Box 1263                    S-164 28 Kista                    SWEDEN                              e-address: spims@sics.se                    Phone: +46-8-7521500, Fax: +46-8-7517230                         TeleLOGIC Uppsala AB, a subsidiary of Swedish Telecom,               distributes and supports a version of SPIMS for commer-               cial use.  It consists of object code for SunOS 4.,               4.3BSD UNIX, DNIX, and Ultrix 2.0/3.0.  Support for               other UNIX-like implementations will be considered               according to demand.  The same interfaces to the DoD               Internet and OSI protocols from the ISODE 4.0 are               included as well as a user manual.                         For further information about SPIMS for the commercial               user please contact:                    Claes Hojenberg                    TeleLOGIC Uppsala AB                    P.O. Box 1218                    S-751 42 UPPSALA                    Sweden                              e-address: claes@uplog.se                    Phone: +46-18-189400, Fax: +46-18-132039IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 133]

Internet Tool Catalog                                  SPRAY                              NAME               spray                    KEYWORDS               benchmark, generator; IP; ping; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Spray is a traffic generation tool that generates RPC               or UDP packets, or ICMP Echo Requests.  The packets are               sent to a remote procedure call application at the des-               tination host.  The count of received packets is               retrieved from the remote application after a certain               number of packets have been transmitted.  The differ-               ence in packets received versus packets sent represents               (on a LAN) the packets that the destination host had to               drop due to increasing queue length.  A measure of               throughput relative to system speed and network load               can thus be obtained.                    MECHANISM               See above.                    CAVEATS               Spray can congest a network.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               SunOS                    AVAILABILITY               Supplied with SunOS.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 134]

Internet Tool Catalog                                TCPDUMP                              NAME               tcpdump                    KEYWORDS               traffic; ethernet, IP, NFS; UNIX, VMS; free.                    ABSTRACT               Tcpdump can interpret and print headers for the follow-               ing protocols: ethernet, IP, ICMP, TCP, UDP, NFS, ND,               ARP/RARP, AppleTalk.  Tcpdump has proven useful for               examining and evaluating the retransmission and window               management operations of TCP implementations.                    MECHANISM               Much like etherfind, tcpdump writes a log file of the               frames traversing an ethernet interface.  Each output               line includes the time a packet is received, the type               of packet, and various values from its header.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               Public domain version requires a kernel patch for               SunOS.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Ethernet.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               BSD UNIX or related OS, or VMS.                    AVAILABILITY               Available, though subject to copyright restrictions,               via anonymous FTP from ftp.ee.lbl.gov.  The source and               documentation for the tool is in compressed tar format,               in file tcpdump.tar.Z.  Also available from               spam.itstd.sri.com, in directory pub.  For VMS hosts               with DEC ethernet controllers, available as part of TGV               MultiNet IP software package.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 135]

Internet Tool Catalog                              TCPLOGGER                              NAME               tcplogger                    KEYWORDS               traffic; IP; eavesdrop; UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               Tcplogger consists of modifications to the 4.3BSD UNIX               source code, and a large library of post-processing               software.  Tcplogger records timestamped information               from TCP and IP packets that are sent and received on a               specified connection.  For each TCP packet, information               such as sequence number, acknowledgement sequence               number, packet size, and header flags is recorded.  For               an IP packet, header length, packet length and TTL               values are recorded.  Customized use of the TCP option               field allows the detection of lost or duplicate pack-               ets.                    MECHANISM               Routines of 4.3BSD UNIX in the netinet directory have               been modified to append information to a log in memory.               The log is read continuously by a user process and               written to a file.  A TCP option has been added to               start the logging of a connection.  Lots of post-               processing software has been written to analyze the               data.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               To get a log at both ends of the connection, the modi-               fied kernel should be run at both the hosts.                         All connections are logged in a single file, but               software is provided to filter out the record of a sin-               gle connection.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               4.3BSD UNIX (as modified for this tool).IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 136]

Internet Tool Catalog                              TCPLOGGER                                        AVAILABILITY               Free, although a 4.3BSD license is required.  Contact               Olafur Gudmundsson (ogud@cs.umd.edu).IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 137]

Internet Tool Catalog                              TOKENVIEW                              NAME               TokenVIEW                    KEYWORDS               control, manager, status; ring; NMS, proprietary; DOS.                    ABSTRACT               Network Management tool for 4/16 Mbit IEEE 802.5 Token               Ring Networks.  Monitors active nodes and ring errors.               Maintains database of nodes, wire centers and their               connections.  Separate network management ring allows               remote configuration of wire centers.                    MECHANISM               A separate network management ring used with Proteon               Intelligent Wire Centers allows wire center configura-               tion information to be read and modified from a single               remote workstation.  A log of network events used with               a database contain nodes, wire centers and their con-               nections, facilitates tracking and correction of net-               work errors.  Requires an "E" series PROM, sold with               package.                    CAVEATS               Currently, only ISA bus cards support the required E               series PROM.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               256 nodes, 1 net.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               512K RAM, CGA or better, hard disk, mouse supported.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               MS-DOS, optional mouse driver                    AVAILABILITY               Fully supported product of Proteon, Inc.  Previously               sold as Advanced Network Manager (ANM).  For more in-               formation, contact:                   Proteon, Inc.             Phone: (508) 898-2800                   2 Technology Drive        Fax:   (508) 366-8901                   Westborough, MA  01581    Telex: 928124IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 138]

Internet Tool Catalog                             TRACEROUTE                              NAME               traceroute                    KEYWORDS               routing; IP; ping; UNIX, VMS; free.                    ABSTRACT               Traceroute is a tool that allows the route taken by               packets from source to destination to be discovered.               It can be used for situations where the IP record route               option would fail, such as intermediate gateways dis-               carding packets, routes that exceed the capacity of an               datagram, or intermediate IP implementations that don't               support record route.  Round trip delays between the               source and intermediate gateways are also reported               allowing the determination of individual gateways con-               tribution to end-to-end delay.                         Enhanced versions of traceroute have been developed               that allow specification of loose source routes for               datagrams.  This allows one to investigate the return               path from remote machines back to the local host.                    MECHANISM               Traceroute relies on the ICMP TIME_EXCEEDED error               reporting mechanism.  When an IP packet is received by               an gateway with a time-to-live value of 0, an ICMP               packet is sent to the host which generated the packet.               By sending packets to a destination with a TTL of 0,               the next hop can be identified as the source of the               ICMP TIME EXCEEDED message.  By incrementing the TTL               field the subsequent hops can be identified.  Each               packet sent out is also time stamped.  The time stamp               is returned as part of the ICMP packet so a round trip               delay can be calculated.                    CAVEATS               Some IP implementations forward packets with a TTL of               0, thus escaping identification.  Others use the TTL               field in the arriving packet as the TTL for the ICMP               error reply, which delays identification.                         Sending datagrams with the source route option will               cause some gateways to crash.  It is considered poor               form to repeat this behavior.                    BUGS               None known.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 139]

Internet Tool Catalog                             TRACEROUTE                                        LIMITATIONS               Most versions of UNIX have errors in the raw IP code               that require kernel mods for the standard version of               traceroute to work.  A version of traceroute exists               that runs without kernel mods under SunOS 3.5 (see               below), but it only operates over an ethernet inter-               face.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               BSD UNIX or related OS, or VMS.                    AVAILABILITY               Available by anonymous FTP from ftp.ee.lbl.gov, in file               traceroute.tar.Z.  It is also available from               uc.msc.umn.edu.                         A version of traceroute that supports Loose Source               Record Route, along with the source code of the               required kernel modifications and a Makefile for               installing them, is available via anonymous FTP from               zerkalo.harvard.edu, in directory pub, file               traceroute_pkg.tar.Z.                         A version of traceroute that runs under SunOS 3.5 and               does NOT require kernel mods is available via anonymous               FTP from dopey.cs.unc.edu, in file               ~ftp/pub/traceroute.tar.Z.                         For VMS, traceroute is available as part of TGV Mul-               tiNet IP software package.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 140]

Internet Tool Catalog                                   TRPT                              NAME               TRPT -- transliterate protocol trace                    KEYWORDS               traffic; IP; eavesdrop; UNIX; free.                    ABSTRACT               TRPT displays a trace of a TCP socket events.  When no               options are supplied, TRPT prints all the trace records               found in a system, grouped according to TCP connection               protocol control block (PCB).                         An example of TRPT output is:                         38241 ESTABLISHED:input               [e0531003..e0531203)@6cc5b402(win=4000)<ACK> -> ESTA-               BLISHED               38241 ESTABLISHED:user RCVD -> ESTABLISHED               38266 ESTABLISHED:output               6cc5b402@e0531203(win=4000)<ACK> -> ESTABLISHED               38331 ESTABLISHED:input               [e0531203..e0531403)@6cc5b402(win=4000)<ACK,FIN,PUSH>               -> CLOSE_WAIT               38331 CLOSE_WAIT:output               6cc5b402@e0531404(win=3dff)<ACK> -> CLOSE_WAIT               38331 CLOSE_WAIT:user RCVD -> CLOSE_WAIT               38343 LAST_ACK:output               6cc5b402@e0531404(win=4000)<ACK,FIN> -> LAST_ACK               38343 CLOSE_WAIT:user DISCONNECT -> LAST_ACK               38343 LAST_ACK:user DETACH -> LAST_ACK                    MECHANISM               TRPT interrogates the buffer of TCP trace records that               is created when a TCP socket is marked for debugging.                    CAVEATS               Prior to using TRPT, an analyst should take steps to               isolate the problem connection and find the address of               its protocol control blocks.                    BUGS               None reported.                    LIMITATIONS               A socket must have the debugging option set for TRPT to               operate.  Another problem is that the output format of               TRPT is difficult.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 141]

Internet Tool Catalog                                   TRPT                              HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               BSD UNIX or related OS.                    AVAILABILITY               Included with BSD and SunOS distributions.  Available               via anonymous FTP from uunet.uu.net, in file bsd-               sources/src/etc/trpt.tar.Z.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 142]

Internet Tool Catalog                                   TTCP                              NAME               TTCP                    KEYWORDS               benchmark, generator; IP; ping; UNIX, VMS; free.                    ABSTRACT               TTCP is a traffic generator that can be used for test-               ing end-to-end throughput.  It is good for evaluating               TCP/IP implementations.                    MECHANISM               Cooperating processes are started on two hosts.  The               open a TCP connection and transfer a high volume of               data.  Delay and throughput are calculated.                    CAVEATS               Will greatly increase system load.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               No restrictions.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               BSD UNIX or related OS, or VMS.                    AVAILABILITY               Source for BSD UNIX is available via anonymous FTP from               vgr.brl.mil, in file ftp/pub/ttcp.c, and from sgi.com,               in file sgi/src/ttcp.c.  A version of TTCP has also               been submitted to the USENET news group               comp.sources.unix.  For VMS, ttcp.c is included in the               MultiNet Programmer's Kit, a standard feature of TGV               MultiNet IP software package.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 143]

Internet Tool Catalog                             UNISYS NCC                              NAME               Unisys Network Control Center (NCC)                    KEYWORDS               alarm, benchmark, control, generator, manager, map,               reference, status, traffic; ethernet, FDDI, IP; NMS,               ping, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               The Unisys Defense Systems Network Control Center (NCC)               provides high-performance software to support the               management and control of TCP/IP-based networks.  The               network management system uses the Simple Network               Management Protocol (SNMP) to exchange management               information between the NCC and network devices.  The               NCC supports the Management Information Base (MIB)               [RFC-1066] and the Structure and Identification of               Management Information for TCP/IP-based Internets               [RFC-1065].  In addition, Unisys has extended the MIB               definitions to support the features of Unisys FDDI LAN               devices, such as the FDDI Smart Concentrators, the FDDI               Host Network Front Ends, and the Remote FDDI, FDDI-to-               LAN, and FDDI-to-DDN gateways.                         The NCC supports seven applications.  The network               topology map displays the physical and logical maps of               the network.  The configuration management tool sup-               ports the modification and validation of network device               configuration data as well as the modification of MIB               configuration data.  The performance monitoring tool               supports the collection and analysis of statistical               parameters from network devices.  The status monitoring               tool reports on the up/down status and responsiveness               of network devices using ICMP.  The accounting tool is               used to collect, store, and display user job activity               at the subscriber hosts.  The NCC database entry sup-               portsRFC 1066 object definitions and Unisys-specific               object definitions to support the Unisys FDDI devices.               And finally, the trap reporting tool reports the               arrival of error and event notifications using UDP               datagrams.  The NCC supports all the trap messages               defined inRFC 1098.                    MECHANISM               The NCC is based on the Simple Network Management Pro-               tocol (SNMP).IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 144]

Internet Tool Catalog                             UNISYS NCC                                        CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               A minimal platform consists of a Sun 3/60FC-8, with at               least 200 MB disk and cartridge tape (1/4").  A full-               sized color monitor, more disk, and a workstation based               on a higher performance processor is beneficial to NCC               activities.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               SunOS Version 4.0 running the SunView windowing en-               vironment and the SYBASE Relational Data Base Manage-               ment System.                    AVAILABILITY               Commercially available as a turn-key package or as a               software product from:                    Unisys Defense Systems                    5151 Camino Ruiz                    Camarillo, California 93010                    (805) 987-6811                    (Dale Russell <dsr@cam.unisys.com>)IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 145]

Internet Tool Catalog                        WIN/MGT STATION                              NAME               WIN/MGT Station -- Network Management Station for               SunOS.                    KEYWORDS               alarm, control, manager, routing, status, traffic; eth-               ernet, IP; NMS, SNMP, X; UNIX; library.                    ABSTRACT               WIN/MGT Station for SunOS is a network management               software product based on the SNMP.  It provides the               capability to manage standards-based networking pro-               ducts from The Wollongong Group as well as other ven-               dors.  Fully compliant with RFCs 1065, 1066 and 1098,               WIN/MGT Station uses a menu-driven graphical user               interface.                         WIN/MGT capabilities include configuration, performance               and fault management for SNMP-based agents.  The               WIN/MGT station can perform polling to monitor the               status of all MIB variables defined inRFC 1066,               "Management Information Base for network management of               TCP/IP-based internets."  In addition, the WIN/MGT Sta-               tion can process "trap" messages from SNMP agents.               Furthermore, the WIN/MGT Station can support any               private extension to the Management Information Base               with minimal user configuration.                         An icon-driven network interface map allows the user to               monitor their network topology and status.  Changes in               the operational status of any manageable network ele-               ment is displayed visually and audibly.                         The WIN/MGT package includes an Applications Program-               ming Interface (API) for the "C" language.  The API is               a set of libraries that enable an applications program               to perform SNMP "set" and "get" operations.  This               allows users to integrate site-specific applications               with WIN/MGT.                         SNMP agent software for the Sun 3 host is also provided               so that the Network Management Station itself can also               be monitored and managed.                    MECHANISM               The WIN/MGT Station uses SNMP to monitor and control               SNMP agents.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 146]

Internet Tool Catalog                        WIN/MGT STATION                              CAVEATS               None.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               A theoretical limitation of approximately 18,000 net-               work elements can be managed.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Any model of Sun 3 system.  Recommended minimums               include 8 MB RAM, 100 MB disk space (30 MB to start),               and color monitor.  Also tested on DECstation 3100,               PS/2 (with SCO UNIX) and Macintosh IIcx computer using               A/UX.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               SunOS 4.x.  MIT X Window System, Release 11, version 3,               or OpenWindows (X.11/NeWS) from Sun Microsystems, Inc.               WIN/MGT Station for SunOS is provided on 1/4" tape in               cpio format.                    AVAILABILITY               A commercial product of:                    The Wollongong Group, Inc.                    1129 San Antonio Rd.                    Palo Alto, CA  94303                    (415) 962-7200 br fax (415) 968-3619                    internet  oldera@twg.comIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 147]

Internet Tool Catalog                            XNETMON (I)                              NAME               xnetmon, xpmon                    KEYWORDS               alarm, manager, map, status; IP; NMS, SNMP; UNIX.                    ABSTRACT               Xnetmon and xpmon provide graphical representation of               performance and status of SNMP-capable network ele-               ments.  Xnetmon presents a schematic network map               representing the up/down status of network elements;               xpmon draws a pen plot style graph of the change over               time of any arbitrary MIB object (RFC1066).  Both xnet-               mon and xpmon use the SNMP (RFC1098) for retrieving               status and performance data.                    MECHANISM               Xnetmon polls network elements for the status of their               interfaces on a controllable polling interval.  Pop-up               windows displaying the values of any MIB variable are               supported by separate polls.  When SNMP traps are               received from a network element, that element and all               adjacent elements are immediately re-polled to update               their status.  The layout of the network map is stati-               cally configured.  Xpmon repeatedly polls (using SNMP)               the designated network element for the value of the               designated MIB variable on the user-specified interval.               The change in the variable is then plotted on the strip               chart.  The strip chart regularly adjusts its scale to               the current maximum value on the graph.                    CAVEATS               Polling intervals should be chosen with care so as not               to affect system performance adversely.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Distributed and supported for Sun-3 systems.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               SunOS 3.5 or 4.x; X11, release 2 or 3.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 148]

Internet Tool Catalog                            XNETMON (I)                                        AVAILABILITY               Commercial product of:                    Wellfleet Communications, Inc.                    12 DeAngelo Drive                    Bedford, MA 01730-2204                    (617) 275-2400IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 149]

Internet Tool Catalog                           XNETMON (II)                              NAME               XNETMON -- an X windows based SNMP network management               station from SNMP Research.                    KEYWORDS               alarm, control, manager, map, routing, security,               status; DECnet, ethernet, IP, OSI, ring, star; NMS,               SNMP, X; DOS, UNIX, VMS; sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               The XNETMON application implements a powerful network               management station based on the X window system.  It               provides network managers tools for fault management,               configuration management, performance management, and               security management.  It can be successfully used with               many types of networks including those based on various               LAN media, and wide area networks.  XNETMON has been               used with multiprotocol devices including those which               support TCP/IP, DECnet, and OSI protocols.  The fault               management tool displays the map of the network confi-               guration with node and link state indicated in one of               several colors to indicate current status.  Alarms may               be enabled to alert the operator of events occurring in               the network.  Events are logged to disk.  The confi-               guration management tool may be used to edit the net-               work management information base stored in the network               management station to reflect changes occurring in the               network.  Other features include graphs and tabular               tools for use in fault and performance management and               mechanisms by which additional variables, such as               vendor-specific variables, may be added.  The XNETMON               application comes complete with source code including a               powerful set of portable libraries for generating and               parsing SNMP messages.  Output data from XNETMON may be               transferred via flat files for additional report gen-               eration by a variety of statistical packages.                    MECHANISM               The XNETMON application is based on the Simple Network               Management Protocol (SNMP).  Polling is performed via               the powerful SNMP get-next operator and the SNMP get               operator.  Trap directed polling is used to regulate               the focus and intensity of the polling.                    CAVEATS               None.                    BUGSIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 150]

Internet Tool Catalog                           XNETMON (II)                                   None known.                    LIMITATIONS               The monitored and managed nodes must implement the SNMP               over UDP perRFC 1098 or must be reachable via a proxy               agent.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               X windows workstation with UDP socket library.  Mono-               chrome is acceptable but color is far superior.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               X windows version 11 release 3 or later.                    AVAILABILITY               This is a commercial product available under license               from:                              SNMP Research                    P.O. Box 8593                    Knoxville, TN 37996-4800                    (615) 573-1434 (Voice)                    (615) 573-9197 (FAX)                    Attn:  Dr. Jeff CaseIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 151]

Internet Tool Catalog                            XNETPERFMON                              NAME               xnetperfmon -- a graphical network performance and               fault management tool from SNMP Research.                    KEYWORDS               manager, status; DECnet, ethernet, IP, OSI, ring, star;               NMS, SNMP, X; DOS, UNIX, VMS; sourcelib.                    ABSTRACT               Xnetperfmon may be used to plot SNMP variables as a               graphical display.  These graphs are often useful for               fault and performance management.  Variables may be               plotted as gauges versus time.  Alternatively, counters               may be plotted as delta count/delta time (rates).  The               user may easily customize the variables to be plotted,               labels, step size, update interval, and the like.  The               scales automatically adjust whenever a point to be               plotted would go off scale.                    MECHANISM               The xnetperfmon application communicates with remote               agents or proxy agents via the Simple Network Manage-               ment Protocol (SNMP).                    CAVEATS               All plots for a single invocation of xnetperfmon must               be for variables provided by a single network manage-               ment agent.  However, multiple invocations of xnetperf-               mon may be active on a single display simultaneously or               proxy agents may be used to summarize information at a               common point.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Systems supporting X windows.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               X Version 11 release 2 or later.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 152]

Internet Tool Catalog                            XNETPERFMON                                        AVAILABILITY               This is a commercial product available under license               from:                              SNMP Research                    P.O. Box 8593                    Knoxville, TN 37996-4800                    (615) 573-1434 (Voice)                    (615) 573-9197 (FAX)                    Attn:  Dr. Jeff CaseIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 153]

Internet Tool Catalog                                    XUP                              NAME               xup                    KEYWORDS               status; ping, X; HP.                    ABSTRACT               Xup uses the X-Windows to display the status of an               "interesting" set of hosts.                    MECHANISM               Xup uses ping to determine host status.                    CAVEATS               Polling for status increases network load.                    BUGS               None known.                    LIMITATIONS               None reported.                    HARDWARE REQUIRED               Runs only on HP series 300 and 800 workstations.                    SOFTWARE REQUIRED               Version 10 of X-Windows.                    AVAILABILITY               A standard command for the HP 300 & 800 Workstations.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 154]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                                                 Network Management Tutorial                              This tutorial is an overview of the practice of network          management.  Reading this section is no substitute for know-          ing your system, and knowing how it is used.  Do not wait          until things break to learn what they ought to do or how          they usually work: a crisis is not the time for determining          how "normal" packet traces should look.  Furthermore, it          takes little imagination to realize that you do not want to          be digging through manuals while your boss is screaming for          network service to be restored.                    We assume an acquaintance with the TCP/IP protocol suite and          the Internet architecture.  There are many available refer-          ences on these topics, several of which are listed below inSection 7.                    Since many of the details of network management are system-          specific, this tutorial is a bit superficial.  There is,          however, a more fundamental problem in prescribing network          management practices: network management is not a well-          understood endeavor.  At present, the cutting edge of net-          work management is the use of distributed systems to collect          and exchange status information, and then to display the          data as histograms or trend lines.  It is not clear that we          know what data should be collected, how to analyze it when          we get it, or how to structure our collection systems.  For          now, automated, real-time control of internets is an aspira-          tion, rather than a reality.  The communications systems          that we field are apparently more complex than we can          comprehend, which no doubt accounts in part for their fre-          quently surprising behavior.                    The first section of this tutorial lists the overall goals          and functions of network management.  It presents several          aspects of network management, including system monitoring,          fault detection and isolation, performance testing, confi-          guration management, and security.  These discussions are          followed by a bibliographic section.  The tutorial closes          with some final advice for network managers.1. Network Management Goals and Functions                    An organization's view of network management goals is shaped          by two factors:IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 155]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                                             1.   people in the organization depend on the system                    working,                         2.   LANs, routers, lines, and other communications                    resources have costs.                    From the organizational vantage point, the ultimate goal of          network management is to provide a consistent, predictable,          acceptable level of service from the available data communi-          cations resources.  To achieve this, a network manager must          first be able to perform fault detection, isolation, and          correction.  He must also be able to effect configuration          changes with a minimum of disruption, and measure the utili-          zation of system components.                    People actually managing networks have a different focus.          Network managers are usually evaluated by the availability          and performance of their communications systems, even though          many factors of net performance are beyond their control.          To them, the most important requirement of a network manage-          ment tool is that it allows the detection and diagnosis of          faults before users can call to complain: users (and bosses)          can often be placated just by knowing that a network problem          has been diagnosed.  Another vital network management func-          tion is the ability to collect data that justify current or          future expenditures for the data communications plant and          staff.                    Following a section on system monitoring, this tutorial          addresses fault, performance, configuration, and security          management.  By fault management, we mean the detection,          diagnosis, and correction of network malfunctions.  Under          the subject of performance management, we include support          for predictable, efficient service, as well as capacity          planning and capacity testing.  Configuration management          includes support for orderly configuration changes (usually,          system growth), and local administration of component names          and addresses.  Security management includes both protecting          system components from damage and protecting sensitive          information from unintentional or malicious disclosure or          corruption.                    Readers familiar with the ISO management standards and          drafts will note both that we have borrowed heavily from the          "OSI Management Framework," except that we have omitted the          "account management" function.  Account management seems a          bit out of place with the other network managementIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 156]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              functions.  The logging required by account management is          likely to be done by specialized, dedicated subsystems that          are distinct from other network management components.          Hence, this tutorial does not cover account management.          Rest assured, however, that account management, if required,          will be adequately supported and staffed.                    For those with a DoD background, security may also seem out          of place as a subtopic of network management.  Without          doubt, communications security is an important issue that          should be considered in its own right.  Because of the          requirements of trust for security mechanisms, security com-          ponents will probably not be integrated subcomponents of a          larger network management system.  Nevertheless, because a          network manager has a responsibility to protect his system          from undue security risks, this tutorial includes a discus-          sion on internet security.2. System Monitoring                    System monitoring is a fundamental aspect of network manage-          ment.  One can divide system monitoring into two rough          categories: error detection and baseline monitoring.                    System errors, such as misformatted frames or dropped pack-          ets, are not in themselves cause for concern.  Spikes in          error rates, however, should be investigated.  It is sound          practice to log error rates over time, so that increases can          be recognized.  Furthermore, logging error rates as a func-          tion of traffic rates can be used to detect congestion.          Investigate unusual error rates and other anomalies as they          are detected, and keep a notebook to record your          discoveries.                    Day-to-day traffic should be monitored, so that the opera-          tional baselines of a system and its components can be          determined.  As well as being essential for performance          management, baseline determination and traffic monitoring          are the keys to early fault detection.                    A preliminary step to developing baseline measurements is          construction of a system map: a graphical representation of          the system components and their interfaces.  Then, measure-          ments of utilization (i.e., use divided by capacity) are          needed.  Problems are most likely to arise, and system tun-          ing efforts are most likely to be beneficial, at highly          utilized components.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 157]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              It is worthwhile to develop a source/destination traffic          matrix, including a breakdown of traffic between the local          system and other internet sites.  Both volume and type of          traffic should be logged, along with its evolution over          time.  Of particular interest for systems with diskless          workstations is memory swapping and other disk server          access.  For all systems, broadcast traffic and routing          traffic should be monitored.  Sudden increases in the vari-          ance of delay or the volume of routing traffic may indicate          thrashing or other soft failures.                    In monitoring a system, long-term averages are of little          use.  Hourly averages are a better indicator of system use.          Variance in utilization and delay should also be tracked.          Sudden spikes in variance are tell-tale signs that a problem          is looming or exists.  So, too, are trends of increased          packet or line errors, broadcasts, routing traffic, or          delay.3. Fault Detection and Isolation                    When a system fails, caution is in order.  A net manager          should make an attempt to diagnose the cause of a system          crash before rebooting.  In many cases, however, a quick          diagnosis will not be possible.  For some high priority          applications, restoring at least some level of service will          have priority over fault repair or even complete fault diag-          nosis.  This necessitates prior planning.  A net manager          must know the vital applications at his site.  If applica-          tions require it, he must also have a fall-back plan for          bringing them online.  Meanwhile, repeated crashes or          hardware failures are unambiguous signs of a problem that          must be corrected.                    A network manager should prepare for fault diagnosis by          becoming familiar with how diagnostic tools respond to net-          work failure.  In times of relative peace, a net manager          should occasionally unplug the network connection from an          unused workstation and then "debug" the problem.                    When diagnosing a fault or anomaly, it is vital to proceed          in an orderly manner, especially since network faults will          usually generate spurious as well as accurate error mes-          sages.  Remember to keep in mind that the network itself is          failing.  Do not place too much trust in anything obtained          remotely.  Furthermore, it is unlikely to be significant          that remote information such as DNS names or NFS files can-          not be obtained.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 158]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              Even spurious messages can be revealing, because they pro-          vide clues to the problem.  From the data at hand, develop          working hypotheses about probable causes of the problems you          detect.  Direct your further data gathering efforts so that          the information you get will either refute or support your          hypotheses.                    An orderly approach to debugging is facilitated if it is          guided by a model of network behavior.  The following por-          tions of this section present such a model, along with a          procedure for checking network connectivity.  The section          concludes with  some hints for diagnosing a particularly          tricky class of connectivity problem.3.1 A Network Model as a Diagnostic Framework                    The point of having a model of how things work is to have a          basis for developing educated guesses about how things go          wrong.  The problem of cascading faults -- faults generating          other faults -- makes use of a conceptual model a virtual          necessity.                    In general, only problems in a component's hardware or          operating system will generate simultaneous faults in multi-          ple protocol layers.  Otherwise, faults will propagate vert-          ically (up the protocol stack) or horizontally (between          peer-level communications components).  Applying a concep-          tual model that includes the architectural relations of net-          work components can help to order an otherwise senseless          barrage of error messages and symptoms.                    The model does not have to be formal or complex to bring          structure to debugging efforts.  A useful start is something          as simple as the following:                         1.   Applications programs use transport services:                    TCP/UDP.  Before using service, applications that                    accept host names as parameters must translate the                    names into IP addresses.  Translation may be based                    on a static table lookup (/etc/hosts file in UNIX                    hosts), the DNS, or yellow pages.  Nslookup and                    DiG are tools for monitoring the activities of the                    DNS.                         2.   Transport protocol implementations use IP ser-                    vices.  The local IP module makes the initial                    decision on forwarding.  An IP datagram is for-                    warded directly to the destination host if theIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 159]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                                        destination is on the same network as the source.                    Otherwise, the datagram is forwarded to a gateway                    attached to the network.  On BSD hosts, the con-                    tents of a host's routing table are visible by use                    of the "netstat" command.*                         3.   IP implementations translate the IP address of a                    datagram's next hop (either the destination host                    or a gateway) to a local network address.  For                    ethernets, the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)                    is commonly used for this translation.  On BSD                    systems, an interface's IP address and other con-                    figuration options can be viewed by use of the                    "ifconfig" command, while the contents of a host's                    ARP cache may be viewed by use of "arp" command.                         4.   IP implementations in hosts and gateways route                    datagrams based on subnet and net identifiers.                    Subnetting is a means of allocating and preserving                    IP address space, and of insulating users from the                    topological details of a multi-network campus.                    Sites that use subnetting reserve portions of the                    IP address's host identifier to indicate particu-                    lar networks at their campus.  Subnetting is                    highly system-dependent.  The details are a criti-                    cal, though local, issue.  As for routing between                    separate networks, a variety of gateway-to-gateway                    protocols are used.  Traceroute is a useful tool                    for investigating routing problems.  The tool,                    "query," can be used to examine RIP routing                    tables.                    A neophyte network manager should expand the above descrip-          tion so that it accurately describes his particular system,          _________________________          * Initial forwarding may actually be complex and          vulnerable to multiple points of failure.  For example,          when sending an IP datagram, 4.3BSD hosts first look          for a route to the particular host.  If none has been          specified for the destination, then a search is made          for a route to the network of the destination.  If this          search also fails, then as a last resort, a search is          made for a route to a "default" gateway.  Routes to          hosts, networks, and the "default" gateway may be stat-          ic, loaded at boot time and perhaps updated by operator          commands.  Alternatively, they may be dynamic, loaded          from redirects and routing protocol updates.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 160]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              and learn the tools and techniques for monitoring the opera-          tions at each of the above stages.3.2 A Simple Procedure for Connectivity Check                    In this section, we describe a procedure for isolating a          TCP/IP connectivity problem.** In this procedure, a series          of tests methodically examine connectivity from a host,          starting with nearby resources and working outward. The          steps in our connectivity-testing procedure are:1.   As an initial sanity check, ping your own IP address     and the loopback address.2.   Next, try to ping other IP hosts on the local subnet.     Use numeric addresses when starting off, since this               eliminates the name resolvers and host tables as poten-               tial sources of problems.  The lack of an answer may               indicate either that the destination host did not               respond to ARP (if it is used on your LAN), or that a               datagram was forwarded (and hence, the destination IP               address was resolved to a local media address) but that               no ICMP Echo Reply was received.  This could indicate a               length-related problem, or misconfigured IP Security.3.   If an IP router (gateway) is in the system, ping both     its near and far-side addresses.4.   Make sure that your local host recognizes the gateway     as a relay.  (For BSD hosts, use netstat.)                    5.addresses               Still using numeric IP addresses, try to ping hosts               beyond the gateway.  If you get no response, run hop-               check or traceroute, if available.  Note whether your               packets even go to the gateway on their way to the des-               tination.  If not, examine the methods used to instruct               your host to use this gateway to reach the specified               destination net (e.g., is the default route in place?               Alternatively, are you successfully wire-tapping the               IGP messages broadcast on the net you are attached to?)                    _________________________          ** Thanks to James VanBokkelen, president of FTP          Software, for sharing with us a portion of a PC/TCP          support document, the basis for the above connectivity          procedure.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 161]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                                   If traceroute is not available, ping, netstat, arp, and               a knowledge of the IP addresses of all the gateway's               interfaces can be used to isolate the cause of the               problem.  Use netstat to determine your next hop to the               destination.  Ping that IP address to ensure the router               is up.  Next, ping the router interface on the far sub-               net.  If the router returns "network unreachable" or               other errors, investigate the router's routing tables               and interface status.  If the pings succeed, ping the               close interface of the succeeding next hop gateway, and               so on.  Remember the routing along the outbound and               return paths may be different.6.   Once ping is working with numeric addresses, use ping     to try to reach a few remote hosts by name.  If ping               fails when host names are used, check the operation of               the local name-mapping system (i.e., with nslookup or               DiG).  If you want to use "shorthand" forms ("myhost"               instead of "myhost.mydomain.com"), be sure that the               alias tables are correctly configured.7.   Once basic reachability has been established with ping,     try some TCP-based applications: FTP and TELNET are               supported on almost all IP hosts, but FINGER is a               simpler protocol.  The Berkeley-specific protocols               (RSH, RCP, REXEC and LPR) require extra configuration               on the server host before they can work, and so are               poor choices for connectivity testing.                    If problems arise in steps 2-7 above, rerunning the tests          while executing a line monitor (e.g., etherfind, netwatch,          or tcpdump) can help to pinpoint the problem.                    The above procedure is sound and useful, especially if lit-          tle is known about the cause of the connectivity problem.          It is not, however, guaranteed to be the shortest path to          diagnosis.  In some cases, a binary search on the problem          might be more effective (i.e., try a test "in the middle,"          in a spot where the failure modes are well defined).  In          other cases, available information might so strongly suggest          a particular failure that immediately testing for it is in          order.  This last "approach," which might be called "hunting          and pecking," should be used with caution: chasing one will          o' the wisp after another can waste much time and effort.                    Note that line problems are still among the most common          causes of connectivity loss.  Problems in transmission          across local media are outside the scope of this tutorial.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 162]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              But, if a host or workstation loses or cannot establish con-          nectivity, check its physical connection.3.3 Limited Connectivity                    An interesting class of problems can result in a particu-          larly mysterious failure: TELNET or other low-volume TCP          connections work, but large file transfers fail.  FTP          transfers may start, but then hang.  There are several pos-          sible culprits in this problem.  The most likely suspects          are IP implementations that cannot fragment or reassemble          datagrams, and TCP implementations that do not perform          dynamic window sizing (a.k.a. Van Jacobson's "Slow Start"          algorithm).  Another possibility is mixing incompatible          frame formats on an ethernet.                    Even today, some IP implementations in the Internet cannot          correctly handle fragmentation or reassembly.  They will          work fine for small packets, but drop all large packets.                    The problem can also be caused by buffer exhaustion at gate-          ways that connect interfaces of widely differing bandwidth.          Datagrams from a TCP connection that traverses a bottleneck          will experience queue delays, and will be dropped if buffer          resources are depleted.  The congestion can be made worse if          the TCP implementation at the traffic source does not use          the recommended algorithms for computing retransmission          times, since spuriously retransmitted datagrams will only          add to the congestion.* Fragmentation, even if correctly          implemented, will compound this problem, since processing          delays and congestion will be increased at the bottleneck.                    Serial Line Internet Protocol (SLIP) links are especially          vulnerable to this and other congestion problems.  SLIP          lines are typically an order of magnitude slower than other          gateway interfaces.  Also, the SLIP lines are at times con-          figured with MTUs (Maximum Transfer Unit, the maximum length          of an IP datagram for a particular subnet) as small as 256          _________________________          * To avoid this problem, TCP implementations on the In-          ternet must use "exponential backoff" between succes-          sive retransmissions, Karn's algorithm for filtering          samples used to estimate round-trip delay between TCP          peers, and Jacobson's algorithm for incorporating vari-          ance into the "retransmission time-out" computation for          TCP segments.  SeeSection 4.2.3.1 of RFC 1122, "Re-          quirements for Internet Hosts -- Communication Layers."IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 163]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              bytes, which virtually guarantees fragmentation.                    To alleviate this problem, TCP implementations behind slow          lines should advertise small windows.  Also, if possible,          SLIP lines should be configured with an MTU no less than 576          bytes.  The tradeoff to weigh is whether interactive traffic          will be penalized too severly by transmission delays of          lengthy datagrams from concurrent file transfers.                    Misuse of ethernet trailers can also cause the problem of          hanging file transfers.  "Trailers" refers to an ethernet          frame format optionally employed by BSD systems to minimize          buffer copying by system software.  BSD systems with ether-          net interfaces can be configured to send large frames so          that their address and control data are at the end of a          frame (hence, a "trailer" instead of a "header").  After a          memory page is allocated and loaded with a received ethernet          frame, the ethernet data will begin at the start of the          memory page boundary.  Hence, the ethernet control informa-          tion can be logically stripped from the end merely by          adjusting the page's length field.  By manipulating virtual          memory mapping, this same page (sans ethernet control infor-          mation), can then be passed to the local IP module without          additional allocation and loading of memory.  The disadvan-          tage in using trailers is that it is non-standard.  Many          implementations cannot parse trailers.                    The hanging FTP problem will appear if a gateway is not con-          figured to recognize trailers, but a host or gateway immedi-          ately "upstream" on an ethernet uses them.  Short datagrams          will not be formatted with trailers, and so will be pro-          cessed correctly.  When the bulk data transfer starts, how-          ever, full-sized frames will be sent, and will use the          trailer format.  To the gateway that receives them, they          appear simply as misformatted frames, and are quietly          dropped.  The solution, obviously, is to insure that all          hosts and gateways on an ethernet are consistent in their          use of trailers.  Note thatRFC 1122, "Internet Host          Requirements," places very strict restrictions on the use of          trailers.4. Performance Testing                    Performance management encompasses two rather different          activities.  One is passive system monitoring to detect          problems and determine operational baselines.  The goal is          to measure system and component utilization and so locate          bottlenecks, since bottlenecks should receive the focus ofIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 164]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              performance tuning efforts.  Also, performance data is usu-          ally required by upper level management to justify the costs          of communications systems.  This is essentially identical to          system monitoring, and is addressed at greater length inSection 2, above.                    Another aspect of performance management is active perfor-          mance testing and capacity planning.  Some work in this area          can be based on analysis.  For example, a rough estimate of          gateway capacity can be deduced from a simple model given by          Charles Hedrick in his "Introduction to Administration of an          Internet-based Local Network," which is                         per-packet processing time =                         switching time +                                   (packet size) * (transmission bps).                    Another guideline for capacity planning is that in order to          avoid excessive queuing delays, a system should be sized at          about double its expected load.  In other words, system          capacity should be so high that utilization is no greater          than 50%.                    Although there are more sophisticated analytic models of          communications systems than those above, their added com-          plexity does not usually gain a corresponding accuracy.          Most analytic models of communications nets require assump-          tions about traffic load distributions and service rates          that are not merely problematic, but are patently false.          These errors tend to result in underestimating queuing          delays.  Hence, it is often necessary to actually load and          measure the performance of a real communications system if          one is to get accurate performance predictions.  Obviously,          this type of testing is performed on isolated systems or          during off hours.  The results can be used to evaluate          parameter settings or predict performance during normal          operations.                    Simulations can be used to supplement the testing of real          systems.  To be believable, however, simulations require          validation, which, in turn, requires measurements from a          real system.  Whether testing or simulating a system's per-          formance, actual traffic traces should be incorporated as          input to traffic generators.  The performance of a communi-          cations system will be greatly influenced by its load          characteristics (burstiness, volume, etc.), which are them-          selves highly dependent on the applications that are run.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 165]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              When tuning a net, in addition to the usual configuration          parameters, consider the impact of the location of gateways          and print and file servers.  A few rules of thumb can guide          the location of shared system resources.  First, there is          the principle of locality: a system will perform better if          most traffic is between nearby destinations.  The second          rule is to avoid creating bottlenecks.  For example, multi-          ple diskservers may be called for to support a large number          of workstations.  Furthermore, to avoid LAN and diskserver          congestion, workstations should be configured with enough          memory to avoid frequent swapping.                    As a final note on performance management, proceed cau-          tiously if your ethernet interface allows you to customize          its collision recovery algorithm.  This is almost always a          bad idea.  The best that it can accomplish is to give a few          favored hosts a disproportionate share of the ethernet          bandwidth, perhaps at the cost of a reduction in total sys-          tem throughput.  Worse, it is possible that differing colli-          sion recovery algorithms may exhibit a self-synchronizing          behavior, so that excess collisions are generated.5. Configuration Management                    Configuration management is the setting, collecting, and          storing of the state and parameters of network resources.          It overlaps all other network management functions.  Hence,          some aspects of configuration management have already been          addressed (e.g., tuning for performance).  In this section,          we will focus on configuration management activities needed          to "hook up" a net or campus to a larger internet.  We will          not, of course, include specific details on installing or          maintaining internetted communications systems.  We will,          however, skim over some of the TCP/IP configuration          highlights.                    Configuration management includes "name management" -- the          control and allocation of system names and addresses, and          the translation between names and addresses.  Name-to-          address translation is performed by "name servers." We con-          clude this section with a few strictures on the simultaneous          use of two automated name-servers, the Domain Name System          (DNS), and Yellow Pages (YP).5.1 Required Host Configuration Data for TCP/IP internets                    In a TCP/IP internet, each host needs several items of          information for internet communications.  Some will beIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 166]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              host-specific, while other information will be common for          all hosts on a subnet.  In a soon to be published RFC docu-          ment,* R. Droms identifies the following configuration data          required by internet hosts:                         o+    An IP address, a host specific value that can be                    hard-coded or obtained via BOOTP, the Reverse                    Address Resolution Protocol (RARP) or Dynamic RARP                    (DRARP).                         o+    Subnet properties, such as the subnet mask and the                    Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU); obviously, these                    values are not host-specific.                         o+    Addresses of "entry" gateways to the internet;                    addresses of default gateways are usually hard-                    coded; though the ICMP "redirect" message can be                    used to refine a host's routing tables, there is                    currently no dynamic TCP/IP mechanism or protocol                    for a host to locate a gateway; an IETF working                    group is busy on this problem.                         o+    For hosts in internets using the Domain Name Sys-                    tem (DNS) for name-to-address translation, the                    location of a local DNS server is needed; this                    information is not host-specific, and usually                    hard-coded;                         o+    Host name (domain name, for hosts using DNS);                    obviously host-specific; either hard-coded or                    obtained in a boot procedure.                         o+    For diskless hosts, various boot services.  BOOTP                    is the standard Internet protocol for downloading                    boot configuration information.  The Trivial File                    Transfer Protocol (TFTP) is typically used for                    downloading boot images.  Sun computers use the                    "bootparams" RPC mechanism for downloading initial                    configuration data to a host.                    There are ongoing developments, most notably the work of the          Dynamic Host Configuration Working Group of the IETF, to          support dynamic, automatic gathering of the above data.  In          the meantime, most systems will rely on hand-crafted confi-          guration files.          _________________________          * Draft "Dynamic Configuration of Internet Hosts."IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 167]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial5.3 Connecting to THE Internet                    The original TCP/IP Internet (spelled with an upper-case          "I") is still active, and still growing.  An interesting          aspect of the Internet is that it spans many independently          administered systems.                    Connection to the Internet requires: a registered network          number, for use in IP addresses; a registered autonomous          system number (ASN), for use in internet routing; and, a          registered domain name.  Fielding a primary and backup DNS          server is a condition for registering a domain name.                    The Defense Data Network (DDN) Network Information Center          (NIC) is responsible for registering network numbers, auto-          nomous system numbers, and domain names.  Regional nets will          have their own policies and requirements for Internet con-          nections, but all use the NIC for this registration service.          Contact the NIC for further information, at:                         DDN Network Information Center               SRI International, Room EJ291               333 Ravenswood Avenue               Menlo Park, CA  94025                         Email:   HOSTMASTER@NIC.DDN.MIL               Phone:   1-415-859-3695                        1-800-235-3155 (toll-free hotline)5.4 YP and DNS: Dueling name servers.                    The Domain Name System (DNS) provides name service: it          translates host names into IP addresses (this mapping is          also called "resolution").  Two widespread DNS implementa-          tions are "bind" and "named."  The Sun Yellow Pages (YP)          system can be configured to provide an identical service, by          providing remote, keyed access to the "hosts.byname" map.          Unfortunately, if both DNS and the YP hosts.byname map are          installed, they can interact in disruptive ways.                    The problem has been noted in systems in which DNS is used          as a fallback, to resolve hostnames that YP cannot.  If DNS          is slow in responding, the timeout in program ypserv may          expire, which triggers a repeated request.  This can result          in disaster if DNS was initially slow because of congestion:          the slower things get, the more requests are generated,          which slows things even more.  A symptom of this problem is          that failures by the DNS server or network will triggerIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 168]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              numerous requests to DNS.                    Reportedly, the bug in YP that results in the avalanche of          DNS requests has been repaired in SunOS 4.1.  The problem,          however, is more fundamental than an implementation error.          The YP map hosts.byname and the DNS contain the same class          of information.  One can get an answer to the same query          from each system.  These answers may well be different:          there is not a mechanism to maintain consistency between the          systems.  More critical, however, is the lack of a mechanism          or procedure to establish which system is authoritative.          Hence, running the DNS and YP name services in parallel is          pointless.  If the systems stay consistent, then only one is          needed.  If they differ, there is no way to choose which is          correct.                    The YP hosts.byname service and DNS are comparable, but          incompatible.  If possible, a site should not run both ser-          vices.  Because of Internet policy, sites with Internet con-          nections MUST use the DNS.  If YP is also used, then it          should be configured with YP-to-DNS disabled.                    Hacking a system so that it uses DNS rather than the YP          hosts.byname map is not trivial, and should not be attempted          by novices.  The approach is to rebuild the shared C link-          library, so that system calls to gethostbyname() and          gethostbyaddr() will use DNS rather than YP.  To complete          the change, programs that do not dynamically link the shared          C library (rcp, arp, etc.)  must also be rebuilt.                    Modified shared C libraries for Sun 3s and Sun 4s are avail-          able via anonymous FTP from host uunet.uu.net, in the sun-          fixes directory.  Note that use of DNS routines rather than          YP for general name resolution is not a supported SunOS          feature at this time.6. Internet Security                    The guidelines and advice in this section pertain to enhanc-          ing the protection of data that are merely "sensitive."  By          themselves, these measures are insufficient for protecting          "classified" data.  Implementing the policies required to          protect classified data is subject to stringent, formal          review procedures, and is regulated by agencies such as the          Defense Investigative Service (DIS) and the National Secu-          rity Agency (NSA).                    A network manager must realize that he is responsible forIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 169]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              protecting his system and its users.  Furthermore, though          the Internet may appear to be a grand example of a coopera-          tive joint enterprise, recent incidents have made it clear          that not all Internet denizens are benign.                    A network manager should be aware that the network services          he runs have a large impact on the security risks to which          his system is exposed.  The prudent network manager will be          very careful as to what services his site provides to the          rest of the Internet, and what access restrictions are          enforced.  For example, the protocol "finger" may provide          more information about a user than should be given to the          world at large.  Worse, most implementations of the protocol          TFTP give access to all world-readable files.                    This section highlights several basic security considera-          tions for Internet sites.  It then lists several sources of          information and advice on improving the security of systems          connected to the Internet.6.1 Basic Internet Security                    Two major Internet security threats are denial of service          and unauthorized access.                    Denial of service threats often take the form of protocol          spoofers or other malicious traffic generators.  These prob-          lems can be detected through system monitoring logs.  If an          attack is suspected, immediately contact your regional net          office (e.g., SURANET, MILNET).  In addition, DDN users          should contact SCC, while other Internet users should con-          tact CERT (see below).  A cogent description of your          system's symptoms will be needed.                    At your own site, be prepared to isolate the problems (e.g.,          by limiting disk space available to the message queue of a          mail system under attack).  As a last resort, coping with an          attack may require taking down an Internet connection.  It          is better, however, not to be too quick to quarantine your          site, since information for coping with the attack may come          via the Internet.                    Unauthorized access is a potentially more ominous security          threat.  The main avenues are attacks against passwords and          attacks against privileged system processes.                    An appallingly common means of gaining entry to systems is          by use of the initial passwords to root, sysdiag, and otherIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 170]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              management accounts that systems are shipped with.  Only          slightly less vulnerable are common or trivial passwords,          since these are readily subverted by dictionary attacks.*          Obvious steps can reduce the risk of password attacks: pass-          words should be short-lived, at least eight characters long,          with a mix of upper and lower case, and preferably random.          The distasteful aspect of memorizing a random string can be          alleviated if the password is pronounceable.                    Improving passwords does not remove all risks.  Passwords          transmitted over an ethernet are visible to all attached          systems.  Furthermore, gateways have the potential to inter-          cept passwords used by any FTP or TELNET connections that          traverse them.  It is a bad idea for the root account to be          accessed by FTP or TELNET if the connections must cross          untrusted elements.                    Attacks against system processes are another avenue of unau-          thorized access.  The principle is that by subverting a sys-          tem process, the attacker can then gain its access          privileges.                    One approach to reducing this risk is to make system pro-          grams harder to subvert.  For example, the widespread attack          in November 1988 by a self-replicating computer program          ("worm," analogous to a tapeworm) subverted the "fingerd"          process, by loading an intrusive bootstrap program (known          variously as a "grappling hook" or "vector" program), and          then corrupting the stack space so that a subroutine's          return address was overwritten with the address of the          bootstrap program.** The security hole in fingerd consisted          of an input routine that did not have a length check.  Secu-          rity fixes to "fingerd" include the use of a revised input          routine.                    A more general protection is to apply the principle of          "least privilege."  Where possible, system routines should          run under separate user IDs, and should have no more          privilege than is necessary for them to function.          _________________________          * Exotic fantasy creatures and women's names are well          represented in most password dictionaries.          ** An early account of the Internet Worm incident of          November 1988 is given by Eugene Spafford in the Janu-          ary 89 issue of "Computer Communications Review."          Several other articles on the worm incident are in the          June 89 issue of the "Communications of the ACM."IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 171]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              To further protect against attacks on system processes, sys-          tem managers should regularly check their system programs to          ensure that they have not been tampered with or modified in          any way.  Checksums should be used for this purpose.  Using          the operating system to check a file's last date of modifi-          cation is insufficient, since the date itself can be          compromised.                    Finally, to avoid the unauthorized replacement of system          code, care should be exercised in assigning protection to          its directory paths.                    Some system programs actually have "trap doors" that facili-          tate subversion.  A trap door is the epitome of an undocu-          mented feature: it is a hidden capability of a system pro-          gram that allows a knowledgeable person to gain access to a          system.  The Internet Worm exploited what was essentially a          trap door in the BSD sendmail program.                    Ensuring against trap doors in software as complex as send-          mail may be infeasible.  In an ideal world, the BSD sendmail          program would be replaced by an entire mail subsystem (i.e.,          perhaps including mail user agents, mail transfer agents,          and text preparation and filing programs).  Any site using          sendmail should at least obtain the less vulnerable,          toughened distribution from ucbarpa.berkeley.edu, in file          ~ftp/4.3/sendmail.tar.Z.  Sites running SunOS should note          that the 4.0.3 release closed the security holes exploited          by the Internet Worm.  Fixes for a more obscure security          hole in SunOS are available from host uunet.uu.net in          ~ftp/sun-fixes; these improvements have been incorporated in          SunOS 4.1.                    Sendmail has problems other than size and complexity.  Its          use of root privileges, its approach to alias expansion, and          several other design characteristics present potential ave-          nues of attack.  For UNIX sites, an alternative mail server          to consider is MMDF, which is now at version 2.  MMDF is          distributed as part of the SCO UNIX distribution, and is          also available in the user contributed portion of 4.3BSD.          Though free, MMDF is licensed, and resale is restricted.          Sites running MMDF should be on the mmdf email list;          requests to join this list should be sent to:               mmdf2-request@relay.cs.net.                    Programs that masquerade as legitimate system code but which          contain trap doors or other aides to unauthorized access are          known as trojan horses.  Computer "viruses," intrusiveIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 172]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              software that infects seemingly innocent programs and pro-          pagates when the infected programs are executed or copied,          are a special case of trojan horse programs.*                    To guard against trojan horse attacks, be wary of programs          downloaded from remote sources.  At minimum, do not download          executables from any but the most trusted sources.  Also, as          noted above, to avoid proliferation of "infected" software,          checksums should be computed, recorded, and periodically          verified.6.2 Security Information Clearing-Houses                    The Internet community can get security assistance from the          Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT), established by          DARPA in November 1988.  The Coordination Center for the          CERT (CERT/CC) is located at the Software Engineering Insti-          tute at Carnegie Mellon University.  The CERT is intended to          respond to computer security threats such as the November          '88 worm attack that invaded many defense and research com-          puters.  ConsultRFC 1135 (Reynolds, J., "The Helminthiasis          of the Internet", USC/ISI, December 1989), for further          information.                    CERT assists Internet sites in response to security attacks          or other emergency situations.  It can immediately tap          experts to diagnose and solve the problems, as well as          establish and maintain communications with the affected com-          puter users and with government authorities as appropriate.          Specific responses will be taken in accordance with the          nature of the problem and the magnitude of the threat.                    CERT is also an information clearing-house for the identifi-          cation and repair of security vulnerabilities, informal          assessments of existing systems in the research community,          improvement to emergency response capability, and both ven-          dor and user security awareness.  This security information          is distributed by periodic bulletins, and is posted to the          USENET news group comp.security.announce.  In addition, the          security advisories issued by CERT, as well as other useful          security-related information, are available via anonymous          FTP from cert.sei.cmu.edu.                    For immediate response to attacks or incidents, CERT mans a          _________________________          * Virus attacks have been seen against PCs, but as yet          have rarely been directed agains UNIX systems.IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 173]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              24-hour hotline at (412) 268-7090.  To subscribe to CERT's          security announcement bulletin, or for further information,          contact:                         CERT               Software Engineering Institute               Carnegie Mellon University               Pittsburgh, PA  15213-3890                         (412) 268-7080               cert@cert.sei.cmu.edu.                    For DDN users, the Security Coordination Center (SCC) serves          a function similar to CERT.  The SCC is the DDN's clearing-          house for host/user security problems and fixes, and works          with the DDN Network Security Officer.  The SCC also distri-          butes the DDN Security Bulletin, which communicates informa-          tion on network and host security exposures, fixes, and con-          cerns to security and management personnel at DDN facili-          ties.  It is available online, via kermit or anonymous FTP,          from nic.ddn.mil, in SCC:DDN-SECURITY-yy-nn.TXT (where "yy"          is the year and "nn" is the bulletin number).  The SCC pro-          vides immediate assistance with DDN-related host security          problems; call (800) 235-3155 (6:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.          Pacific Time) or send e-Mail to SCC@NIC.DDN.MIL.  For 24          hour coverage, call the MILNET Trouble Desk (800) 451-7413          or AUTOVON 231-1713.                    The CERT/CC and the SCC communicate on a regular basis and          support each other when problems occur.  These two organiza-          tions are examples of the incident response centers that are          forming; each serving their own constituency or focusing on          a particular area of technology.                    Other network groups that discuss security issues are:          comp.protocols.tcp-ip, comp.virus (mostly PC-related, but          occasionally covers Internet topics), misc.security, and the          BITNET Listserv list called VIRUS-L.7. Internet Information                    There are many available references on the TCP/IP protocol          suite, the internet architecture, and the DDN Internet.  A          soon to be published FYI RFC document, "Where to Start: A          Bibliography of General Internetworking Information." pro-          vides a bibliography of online and hard copy documents,          reference materials, and multimedia training tools that          address general networking information and "how to use theIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 174]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              Internet."  It presents a representative collection of          materials that will help the reader become familiar with the          concepts of internetworking.  Inquires on the current status          of this document can be sent to user-doc@nnsc.nsf.net or by          postal mail to:                         Corporation for National Research Initiatives               1895 Preston White, Suite 100               Reston, VA  22091               Attn: IAB Secretariat.                    Two texts on networking are especially noteworthy.Inter-networkingWithTCP/IP, by Douglas Comer, is an informative          description of the TCP/IP protocol suite and its underlying          architecture.  TheUNIXSystemAdministrationHandbook, by          Nemeth, Snyder, and Seebass, is a "must have" for system          administrators who are responsible for UNIX hosts.  In addi-          tion to covering UNIX, it provides a wealth of tutorial          material on networking, the Internet, and network manage-          ment.                    A great deal of information on the Internet is available          online.  An automated, online reference service is available          from CSNET.  To obtain a bibliography of their online offer-          ings, send the email message                         request: info               topic: help               request: end                    to info-server@sh.cs.net.                    The DDN NIC also offers automated access to many NIC docu-          ments, online files, and WHOIS information via electronic          mail.  To use the service, send an email message with your          request specified in the SUBJECT field of the message.  For          a sampling of the type of offerings available through this          service, send the following message                         To: SERVICE@NIC.DDN.MIL               Subject: help               Msg: <none>                              The DDN Protocol Implementations and Vendors Guide, pub-          lished by the DDN Network Information Center (DDN NIC),* is          _________________________          * Products mentioned in the guide are not specificallyIETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 175]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              an online reference to products and implementations associ-          ated with the DoD Defense Data Network (DDN) group of com-          munication protocols, with emphasis on TCP/IP and OSI proto-          cols.  It contains information on protocol policy and          evaluation procedures, a discussion of software and hardware          implementations, and analysis tools with a focus on protocol          and network analyzers.  To obtain the guide, invoke FTP at          your local host and connect to host NIC.DDN.MIL (internet          address 26.0.0.73 or 10.0.0.51).  Log in using username          'anonymous' with password 'guest' and get the file          NETINFO:VENDORS-GUIDE.DOC.                    The DDN Protocol Guide is also available in hardcopy form.          To obtain a hardcopy version of the guide, contact the DDN          Network Information Center:                         By U.S. mail:                       SRI International                       DDN Network Information Center                       333 Ravenswood Avenue, Room EJ291                       Menlo Park, CA 94025                         By e-mail:                       NIC@NIC.DDN.MIL                         By phone:                       1-415-859-3695                       1-800-235-3155 (toll-free hotline)                    For further information about the guide, or for information          on how to list a product in a subsequent edition of the          guide, contact the DDN NIC.                    There are many additional online sources on Internet Manage-          ment.RFC 1118, "A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Internet," by          Ed Krol, is a useful introduction to the Internet routing          algorithms.  For more of the nitty-gritty on laying out and          configuring a campus net, see Charles Hedrick's "Introduc-          tion to Administration of an Internet-based Local Network,"          available via anonymous FTP from cs.rutgers.edu (sometimes          listed in host tables as aramis.rutgers.edu), in subdirec-          tory runet, file tcp-ip-admin.  Finally, anyone responsible          for systems connected to the Internet must be thoroughly          versed in the Host Requirements RFCs (RFC 1122 andRFC 1123)          _________________________          endorsed or recommended by the Defense Communications          Agency (DCA).IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 176]

Appendix                         Network Management Tutorial                              and "Requirements for Internet Gateways,"RFC 1009.8. The Final Words on Internet Management                    Keep smiling, no matter how bad things may seem.  You are          the expert.  They need you.9. Security Considerations                    Security issues are discussed inSection 6.10. Author's Address                    Robert H. Stine          SPARTA, Inc.7926 Jones Branch Drive          Suite 1070          McLean, VA 22102                    EMail: STINE@SPARTA.COM                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                IETF NOCTools Working Group                       [Page 177]

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