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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                     T. Dietz, Ed.Request for Comments: 5815                              NEC Europe, Ltd.Category: Standards Track                                   A. KobayashiISSN: 2070-1721                                             NTT PF Labs.                                                               B. Claise                                                     Cisco Systems, Inc.                                                                G. Muenz                                        Technische Universitaet Muenchen                                                              April 2010Definitions of Managed Objects for IP Flow Information ExportAbstract   This document defines managed objects for IP Flow Information eXport   (IPFIX).  These objects provide information for monitoring IPFIX   Exporters and IPFIX Collectors including the basic configuration   information.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5815.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. IPFIX Documents Overview ........................................33. The Internet-Standard Management Framework ......................44. Terminology .....................................................45. Structure of the IPFIX MIB ......................................45.1. The Transport Session Table ................................45.2. The Template Table .........................................75.3. The Template Definition Table ..............................95.4. The Export Table ..........................................115.5. The Metering Process Table ................................125.6. The Observation Point Table ...............................135.7. The Selection Process Table ...............................145.8. The Statistical Tables ....................................155.8.1. The Transport Session Statistical Table ............155.8.2. The Template Statistical Table .....................155.8.3. The Metering Process Statistical Table .............155.8.4. The Selection Process Statistical Table ............156. Structure of the IPFIX SELECTOR MIB ............................156.1. The Selector Functions ....................................167. Relationship to Other MIB Modules ..............................187.1. Relationship to the ENTITY MIB and IF MIB .................187.2. MIB Modules Required for IMPORTS ..........................188. MIB Definitions ................................................188.1. IPFIX MIB Definition ......................................198.2. IPFIX SELECTOR MIB Definition .............................569. Security Considerations ........................................6010. IANA Considerations ...........................................6111. Acknowledgments ...............................................6112. References ....................................................6212.1. Normative References .....................................6212.2. Informative References ...................................63Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 20101.  Introduction   This document defines two MIB modules for monitoring IP Flow   Information eXport (IPFIX) Devices including Exporters and   Collectors.  Most of the objects defined by the IPFIX MIB module MUST   be implemented.  Some objects MAY be implemented corresponding to the   functionality implemented in the equipment.  Since the IPFIX   architecture [RFC5470] foresees the possibility of using Filtering   and/or Sampling functions to reduce the data volume, this document   also provides the IPFIX SELECTOR MIB module, which contains the   standardized selection methods and is controlled by IANA.  The full   configuration of the IPFIX Metering Process is out of the scope of   these MIB modules.   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [RFC2119].2.  IPFIX Documents Overview   The IPFIX protocol provides network administrators with access to IP   Flow information.  The architecture for the export of measured IP   Flow information out of an IPFIX Exporting Process to a Collecting   Process is defined in [RFC5470], per the requirements defined in   [RFC3917].  The protocol document [RFC5101] specifies how IPFIX Data   Records and Templates are carried via a congestion-aware transport   protocol from IPFIX Exporting Processes to IPFIX Collecting   Processes.  IPFIX has a formal description of IPFIX Information   Elements, their name, type and additional semantic information, as   specified in [RFC5102].  Finally, [RFC5472] describes what type of   applications can use the IPFIX protocol and how they can use the   information provided.  It furthermore shows how the IPFIX framework   relates to other architectures and frameworks.   It is assumed that Flow metering, export, and collection is performed   according to the IPFIX architecture defined in [RFC5470].  The   monitored configuration parameters of the export and collection of   Flow Templates and Data Records is modeled according to [RFC5101].   Packet selection methods that may be optionally used by the IPFIX   Metering Process are not considered in this MIB module.  They are   defined in the Packet Sampling (PSAMP) framework [RFC5474] and   Sampling techniques [RFC5475] documents.  Nevertheless, the basis for   defining Sampling and Filtering functions is given with the IPFIX   SELECTOR MIB module.  Since the PSAMP export protocol [RFC5476] is   based on the IPFIX protocol, the Sampling and Filtering functions can   be added to the IPFIX SELECTOR MIB module as needed.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 20103.  The Internet-Standard Management Framework   For a detailed overview of the documents that describe the current   Internet-Standard Management Framework, please refer tosection 7 of   RFC 3410 [RFC3410].   Managed objects are accessed via a virtual information store, termed   the Management Information Base or MIB.  MIB objects are generally   accessed through the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP).   Objects in the MIB are defined using the mechanisms defined in the   Structure of Management Information (SMI).  This memo specifies MIB   modules that are compliant to the SMIv2, which is described in STD   58,RFC 2578 [RFC2578], STD 58,RFC 2579 [RFC2579] and STD 58,RFC2580 [RFC2580].4.  Terminology   The definitions of the basic terms like IP Traffic Flow, Exporting   Process, Collecting Process, Observation Points, etc. can be found in   the IPFIX protocol document [RFC5101].5.  Structure of the IPFIX MIB   The IPFIX MIB module consists of seven main tables, the Transport   Session table, the Template table and the corresponding Template   Definition table, the Export table, the Metering Process table, the   Observation Point table, and the Selection Process table.  Since the   IPFIX architecture [RFC5470] foresees the possibility of using   Filtering and/or Sampling functions to reduce the data volume, the   MIB module provides the basic objects for these functions with the   Selection Process table.  The IPFIX SELECTOR MIB module defined in   the next section provides the standard Filtering and Sampling   functions that can be referenced in the ipfixSelectionProcessTable.   All remaining objects contain statistical values for the different   tables contained in the MIB module.   The following subsections describe all tables in the IPFIX MIB   module.5.1.  The Transport Session Table   The Transport Session is the basis of the MIB module.  The Transport   Session table (ipfixTransportSessionTable) contains all Transport   Sessions between Exporter and Collector.  The table specifies the   transport layer protocol of the Transport Session and, depending on   that protocol, further parameters for the Transport Session.  In the   case of UDP and TCP, these are the source and destination address asDietz, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   well as the source and destination port.  For Stream Control   Transmission Protocol (SCTP), the table contains the SCTP Assoc Id,   which is the index for the SCTP association in the SCTP MIB module   [RFC3873].  The mode of operation of the device, i.e., if the   Transport Session is used for collecting or exporting is given in the   ipfixTransportSessionDeviceMode object.  Further on, it contains the   configured refresh parameters for Templates and Options Templates   that are used across unreliable connections as UDP.  Finally, the   IPFIX version that is exported or collected by this Transport Session   and a status of the Transport Session is given in the table.   To illustrate the use of the above tables, let us assume the   following scenario: we have an Exporter on IP address 192.0.2.22 and   a Collector on IP address 192.0.2.37.  The Exporter uses TCP to   export Templates and Data Records.  The same Exporter also exports,   with UDP, to a Collector with the IP address of 192.0.2.44.  This   would lead to the following Transport Session table on the Exporter:Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010    ipfixTransportSessionTable (1)    |    +- ipfixTransportSessionEntry (1)       |       +- index (5) (ipfixTransportSessionIndex)       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionIndex (1) = 5       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionProtocol (2) = 6 (TCP)       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionSourceAddressType (3) = 1 (ipv4)       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionSourceAddress (4) = 192.0.2.22       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionDestinationAddressType (5) = 1 (ipv4)       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionDestinationAddress (6) = 192.0.2.37       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionSourcePort (7) = 7653       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionDestinationPort (8) = 4739       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionSctpAssocId (9) = 0       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionDeviceMode (10) = exporting(1)       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionTemplateRefreshTimeout (11) = 0       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionOptionTemplateRefreshTimeout (12) = 0       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionTemplateRefreshPacket (13) = 0       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionOptionTemplateRefreshPacket (14) = 0       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionIpfixVersion (15) = 10       |  +- ipfixTransportSessionStatus (16) = 2 (active)       .       .       .       +- index (11) (ipfixTransportSessionIndex)          +- ipfixTransportSessionIndex (1) = 11          +- ipfixTransportSessionProtocol (2) = 17 (UDP)          +- ipfixTransportSessionSourceAddressType (3) = 1 (ipv4)          +- ipfixTransportSessionSourceAddress (4) = 192.0.2.22          +- ipfixTransportSessionDestinationAddressType (5) = 1 (ipv4)          +- ipfixTransportSessionDestinationAddress (6) = 192.0.2.44          +- ipfixTransportSessionSourcePort (7) = 14287          +- ipfixTransportSessionDestinationPort (8) = 4739          +- ipfixTransportSessionSctpAssocId (9) = 0          +- ipfixTransportSessionDeviceMode (10) = exporting(1)          +- ipfixTransportSessionTemplateRefreshTimeout (11) = 100          +- ipfixTransportSessionOptionTemplateRefreshTimeout (12)          |                                                     = 100          +- ipfixTransportSessionTemplateRefreshPacket (13) = 10          +- ipfixTransportSessionOptionTemplateRefreshPacket (14) = 10          +- ipfixTransportSessionIpfixVersion (15) = 10          +- ipfixTransportSessionStatus (16) = 2 (active)   The values in brackets are the OID numbers.  The Collectors would   then have the same entry except that the index would most likely   differ and the ipfixTransportSessionDeviceMode would be   collecting(2).Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 20105.2.  The Template Table   The Template table lists all Templates (including Options Templates)   that are sent (by an Exporter) or received (by a Collector).  The   (Options) Templates are unique per Transport Session, which also   gives the device mode (Exporter or Collector) and Observation Domain;   thus, the table is indexed by:   o  the Transport Session Index (ipfixTransportSessionIndex)   o  and the Observation Domain Id (ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId).   It contains the Set Id and an access time denoting the time when the   (Options) Template was last sent or received.   To resume the above example, the Exporter may want to export a   Template and an Options Template for each Transport Session defined   above.  This leads to the following Template table defining Template   and Options Template:Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010    ipfixTemplateTable (3)    |    +- ipfixTemplateEntry (1)       |       +- index (5) (ipfixTransportSessionIndex)       |  +- index (3) (ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId)       |     + index (257) (ipfixTemplateId)       |     | +- ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId (1) = 3       |     | +- ipfixTemplateId (2) = 257       |     | +- ipfixTemplateSetId (3) = 2       |     | +- ipfixTemplateAccessTime (4)       |     |                             = 2008-7-1,12:49:11.2,+2:0       |     |       |     + index (264) (ipfixTemplateId)       |       +- ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId (1) = 3       |       +- ipfixTemplateId (2) = 264       |       +- ipfixTemplateSetId (3) = 3       |       +- ipfixTemplateAccessTime (4)       .                                   = 2008-7-1,12:47:04.8,+2:0       .       .       .       +- index (11) (ipfixTransportSessionIndex)          +- index (3) (ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId)             + index (273) (ipfixTemplateId)             | +- ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId (1) = 3             | +- ipfixTemplateId (2) = 273             | +- ipfixTemplateSetId (3) = 2             | +- ipfixTemplateAccessTime (4)             |                             = 2008-7-1,12:49:11.2,+2:0             |             + index (289) (ipfixTemplateId)               +- ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId (1) = 3               +- ipfixTemplateId (2) = 289               +- ipfixTemplateSetId (3) = 3               +- ipfixTemplateAccessTime (4)                                           = 2008-7-1,12:47:04.8,+2:0   We assume that the Transport Session that is stored with index 5 in   the Transport Session table of the Exporter is stored with index 17   in the Transport Session table of the (corresponding) Collector.   Then, the Template table would look as follows:Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010    ipfixTemplateTable (3)    |    +- ipfixTemplateEntry (1)       |       +- index (17) (ipfixTransportSessionIndex)          +- index (3) (ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId)             + index (257) (ipfixTemplateId)             | +- ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId (1) = 3             | +- ipfixTemplateId (2) = 257             | +- ipfixTemplateSetId (3) = 2             | +- ipfixTemplateAccessTime (4)             |                             = 2008-7-1,12:49:11.8,+2:0             |             + index (264) (ipfixTemplateId)               +- ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId (1) = 3               +- ipfixTemplateId (2) = 264               +- ipfixTemplateSetId (3) = 3               +- ipfixTemplateAccessTime (4)                                           = 2008-7-1,12:47:05.3,+2:0   The table on the second Collector would be analogous to the one shown   above.5.3.  The Template Definition Table   The Template Definition table lists all the Information Elements   contained in a Template or Options Template.  Therefore, it has the   same indexes as the corresponding Template table plus the Template   Id.  Its own index denotes the order of the Information Element   inside the Template.  Besides the Information Element Id and the   length of the encoded value, the table contains the enterprise number   for enterprise-specific Information Elements and flags for each   Information Element.  The flags indicate if the Information Element   is used for scoping or as a Flow Key.   To resume the above example again, the Exporter is configured to   export the octets received and dropped at the Observation Point since   the last export of these values.  In addition, it exports the start   and end time of the Flow relative to the timestamp contained in the   IPFIX header.  This leads to the following Template Definition table   on the Exporter:Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010    ipfixTemplateDefinitionTable (4)    |    +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionEntry (1)       |       +- index (5) (ipfixTransportSessionIndex)          +- index (3) (ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId)             + index (257) (ipfixTemplateId)               +- index (1) (ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex)               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex (1) = 1               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeId (2) = 158               |  |                      (flowStartDeltaMicroseconds)               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeLength (3) = 4               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionEnterprise (4) = 0               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionFlags (5) = 0               |               +- index (2) (ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex)               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex (1) = 2               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeId (2) = 159               |  |                      (flowEndDeltaMicroseconds)               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeLength (3) = 4               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionEnterprise (4) = 0               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionFlags (5) = 0               |               +- index (3) (ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex)               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex (1) = 3               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeId (2) = 1               |  |                                 (octetDeltaCount)               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeLength (3) = 8               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionEnterprise (4) = 0               |  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionFlags (5) = 0               |               +- index (4) (ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex)                  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex (1) = 4                  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeId (2) = 132                  |                          (droppedOctetDeltaCount)                  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeLength (3) = 8                  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionEnterprise (4) = 0                  +- ipfixTemplateDefinitionFlags (5) = 0   The corresponding table entry on the Collector is the same except   that it would have another ipfixTransportSessionIndex, e.g., 17 as in   the previous example.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 20105.4.  The Export Table   On Exporters, the Export table (ipfixExportTable) can be used to   support features like failover, load-balancing, duplicate export to   several Collectors, etc.  The table has three indexes that link an   entry with:   o  the Metering Process table (ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId, see      below)   o  and the Transport Session table (ipfixTransportSessionIndex).   Those entries with the same ipfixExportIndex and the same   ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId define a Transport Session group.  The   member type for each group member describes its functionality.  All   Transport Sessions referenced in this table MUST have the   ipfixTransportSessionDeviceMode exporting(1).   If the Exporter does not use Transport Session grouping, then each   ipfixExportIndex contains a single ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId, and   thus a singe Transport Session (ipfixTransportSessionIndex) and this   session MUST have the member type primary(1).   For failover, a Transport Session group can contain one Transport   Session with member type "primary" and several Transport Sessions   with type secondary(2).  Entries with other member types are not   allowed for that type of group.  For load-balancing or parallel   export, all Transport Sessions in the group MUST have the same member   type, either loadBalancing(4) or parallel(3).   The algorithms used for failover or load-balancing are out of the   scope of this document.   To continue the example, we assume that the Exporter uses the two   connections shown in the examples above as one primary Transport   Session protected by a secondary Transport Session.  The Exporter   then has the following entries in the ipfixExportTable:Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010    ipfixExportTable (5)    |    +- ipfixExportEntry (1)       |       +- index (7) (ipfixExportIndex)       |  +- index (9) (ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId)       |     |  +- index (5) (ipfixTransportSessionIndex)       |        |  +- ipfixExportIndex (1) = 7       |        |  +- ipfixExportMemberType (2) = 1 (primary)       |        |       |        +- index (11) (ipfixTransportSessionIndex)       |           +- ipfixExportIndex (1) = 7       |           +- ipfixExportMemberType (2) = 2 (secondary)       |       +- index (8) (ipfixExportIndex)          +- index (9) (ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId)             +- index (5) (ipfixTransportSessionIndex)             |  +- ipfixExportIndex (1) = 8             |  +- ipfixExportMemberType (2) = 2 (secondary)             +- index (11) (ipfixTransportSessionIndex)                +- ipfixExportIndex (1) = 8                +- ipfixExportMemberType (2) = 1 (primary)   The example shows that the Exporter uses the Metering Process Cache   9, explained below, to export IPFIX Data Records for the Transport   Sessions 5 and 11.  The Templates 257 and 264 defined above are   exported within Transport Session 5, and the Templates 273 and 289   are exported within Transport Session 11.  If we assume that   Templates 257 and 264 are identical, then the Collector that receives   Transport Session 11 is a backup for the Collector of Transport   Session 5.5.5.  The Metering Process Table   The Metering Process, as defined in [RFC5101], consists of a set of   functions.  Maintaining the Flow Records is one of them.  This   function is responsible for passing the Flow Records to the Exporting   Process and also for detecting Flow expiration.  The Flow Records   that are maintained by the Metering Process can be grouped by the   Observation Points at which they are observed.  The instance that   maintains such a group of Flow Records is a kind of cache.  For this   reason, the Metering Process table (ipfixMeteringProcessTable) is   indexed by cache Ids (ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId).  Each cache can   be maintained by a separate instance of the Metering Process.  To   specify the Observation Point(s) where the Flow Records are gathered,   the ipfixMeteringProcessObservationPointGroupRef may contain an   ipfixObservationPointGroupId from the Observation Point table   (ipfixObservationPointTable) described in the next section.  If anDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   Observation Point is not specified for the Flow Records, the   ipfixMeteringProcessObservationPointGroupRef MUST be zero(0).  The   timeouts (ipfixMeteringProcessCacheActiveTimeout and   ipfixMeteringProcessCacheInactiveTimeout) specify when Flows are   expired.    ipfixMeteringProcessTable (6)    |    +- ipfixMeteringProcessEntry (1)       |       +- index (9) (ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId)          +- ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId (1) = 9          +- ipfixMeteringProcessObservationPointGroupRef (2) = 17          +- ipfixMeteringProcessCacheActiveTimeout (3) = 100          +- ipfixMeteringProcessCacheInactiveTimeout (4) = 1005.6.  The Observation Point Table   The Observation Point table (ipfixObservationPointTable) groups   Observation Points with the ipfixObservationPointGroupId.  Each entry   contains the Observation Domain Id in which the Observation Point is   located and a reference to the ENTITY MIB module [RFC4133] or the IF   MIB module [RFC2863].  The objects in the ENTITY MIB module   referenced by ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntity or IF MIB module   referenced by ipfixObservationPointPhysicalInterface denote the   Observation Point.  If no such index can be given in those modules,   the references MUST be 0.  If a reference is given in both object   ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntity and   ipfixObservationPointPhysicalInterface, then both MUST point to the   same physical interface.  In addition, a direction can be given to   render more specifically which Flow to monitor.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010    ipfixObservationPointTable (7)    |    +- ipfixObservationPointEntry (1)       |       +- index (17) (ipfixObservationPointGroupId)          +- index (1) (ipfixObservationPointIndex)          |  +- ipfixObservationPointGroupId (1) = 17          |  +- ipfixObservationPointIndex (2) = 1          |  +- ipfixObservationPointObservationDomainId (3) = 3          |  +- ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntity (4) = 6          |  +- ipfixObservationPointPhysicalInterface(5) = 0          |  +- ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntityDirection (6)                                                             = 3 (both)          |          +- index (2) (ipfixObservationPointIndex)             +- ipfixObservationPointGroupId (1) = 17             +- ipfixObservationPointIndex (2) = 2             +- ipfixObservationPointObservationDomainId (3) = 3             +- ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntity (4) = 0             +- ipfixObservationPointPhysicalInterface (5) = 0             +- ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntityDirection (6)                                                           = 1 (ingress)5.7.  The Selection Process Table   This table supports the usage of Filtering and Sampling functions, as   described in [RFC5470].  It contains lists of functions per Metering   Process cache (ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId).  The selection process   index ipfixSelectionProcessIndex forms groups of selection methods   that are applied to an observed packet stream.  The selection process   selector index (ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorIndex) indicates the   order in which the functions are applied to the packets observed at   the Observation Points associated with the Metering Process cache.   The selection methods are applied in increasing order, i.e.,   selection methods with a lower ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorIndex are   applied first.  The functions are referred by object identifiers   pointing to the function with its parameters.  If the selection   method does not use parameters, then it MUST point to the root of the   function subtree (see alsoSection 6).  If the function uses   parameters, then it MUST point to an entry in the parameter table of   the selection method.  If no Filtering or Sampling function is used   for a Metering Process, then an entry for the Metering Process SHOULD   be created pointing to the Select All function (ipfixFuncSelectAll).Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 20105.8.  The Statistical Tables   For the ipfixTransportSessionTable, the ipfixTemplateTable, the   ipfixMeteringProcessTable, and the ipfixSelectionProcessTable   statistical tables are defined that augment those tables.  All the   statistical tables contain a discontinuity object that holds a   timestamp that denotes the time when a discontinuity event occurred   to notify the management system that the counters contained in those   tables might not be continuous anymore.5.8.1.  The Transport Session Statistical Table   The Transport Session Statistical table   (ipfixTransportSessionStatsTable) augments the   ipfixTransportSessionTable with statistical values.  It contains the   rate (in bytes per second) with which it receives or sends out IPFIX   Messages, the number of bytes, packets, messages, Records, Templates   and Options Templates received or sent and the number of messages   that were discarded.5.8.2.  The Template Statistical Table   This table contains a statistical value for each Template.  It   augments the Template table (ipfixTemplateTable) and specifies the   number of Data Records exported or collected for the Template.5.8.3.  The Metering Process Statistical Table   This table augments the Metering Process table   (ipfixMeteringProcessTable).  It contains the statistical values for   the exported Data Records and the number of unused cache entries.5.8.4.  The Selection Process Statistical Table   This table augments the Selection Process table   (ipfixSelectionProcessTable) and introduces two generic statistical   values, the number of packets observed and the number of packets   dropped by the selection method.6.  Structure of the IPFIX SELECTOR MIB   The IPFIX SELECTOR MIB module defined in this section provides the   standard Filtering and Sampling functions that can be referenced in   the ipfixSelectionProcessTable.  The subtree ipfixSelectorFunctions   is a placeholder where all standard Filtering and Sampling functions   should be located.  It currently contains the Select All function   (ipfixFuncSelectAll).  The IPFIX SELECTOR MIB module is maintained by   IANA and can be extended through Expert Review [RFC5226], i.e.,Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   review by one of a group of experts designated by an IETF Area   Director.  The group of experts MUST check the requested MIB objects   for completeness and accuracy of the description.  Requests for MIB   objects that duplicate the functionality of existing objects SHOULD   be declined.  The smallest available OID SHOULD be assigned to a new   MIB objects.  The specification of new MIB objects SHOULD follow the   structure specified in the next Section and MUST be published using a   well-established and persistent publication medium.  The experts will   initially be drawn from the Working Group Chairs and document editors   of the IPFIX and PSAMP Working Groups.6.1.  The Selector Functions   The following figure shows what the MIB tree usually should look   like.  It already contains the ipfixFuncSelectAll.  The subtree in   ipfixFuncF2 gives the basic structure that all selection methods   SHOULD follow.    ipfixSelectorFunctions    |    +- ipfixFuncSelectAll    |  |    |  +- ipfixFuncSelectAllAvail (is the function available?)    |    +- ipfixFuncF2    |  |    |  +- ipfixFuncF2Avail (is the function F2 available?)    |  |    |  +- ipfixFuncF2Parameters (a table with parameters)    ...    |    +- ipfixFunFn...   The selection method SHOULD be designed as a MIB subtree introduced   by an object with the name ipfixFunc appended by a function name.   The objects in this subtree SHOULD be prefixed by this name.  If the   function is named Fx, then we would start a subtree with an OID named   ipfixFuncFx.  This subtree should contain an object ipfixFuncFxAvail   that has the type TruthValue.  If a selection method takes   parameters, the MIB should contain a table named   ipfixFuncFxParameters, which should contain all the parameters that   the selection method specifies.  An entry in this table will be   referenced by the IPFIX MIB module if the selection method with the   parameters is used.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   To illustrate the structure defined above, the following contains an   example of a function MyFunc that holds three integer parameters   Param1, Param2, and Param3.  In the example, there are currently two   instances of the parameters set defined with indexes 1 and 4.    ipfixSelectorFunctions (1)    |    +- ipfixFuncMyFunc (?)       |       +- ipfixFuncMyFuncAvail (1) = true       +- ipfixFuncMyFuncParameters (2)          |          +- ipfixFuncMyFuncParametersEntry (1)             |             +- index (1) (ipfixFuncMyFuncParametersIndex)             |  +- ipfixFuncMyFuncParam1 (1) = 47             |  +- ipfixFuncMyFuncParam2 (2) = -128             |  +- ipficFuncMyFuncParam3 (3) = 19             |             +- index(4) (ipfixFuncMyFuncParametersIndex)                +- ipfixFuncMyFuncParam1 (1) = 19                +- ipfixFuncMyFuncParam2 (2) = -1                +- ipficFuncMyFuncParam3 (3) = 728   If the function defined above is referenced in the IPFIX MIB module,   the ipfixSelectionProcessTable would look as follows:    ipfixSelectionProcessTable (8)    |    +- ipfixSelectionProcessEntry (1)       |       +- index (9) (ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId)          +- index (1) (ipfixSelectionProcessIndex)             +- index (1) (ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorIndex)             |  +- ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorFunction (3)             |                          = ipfixSelectorFunctions.?.2.1.4             +- index (2) (ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorIndex)                +- ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorFunction (3)                                        = ipfixSelectorFunctions.?.2.1.1   This means that for the ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId(9), a Selection   Process with index 1 is created that applies two times the same   function but with different parameter sets.  First, the function   MyFunc is applied with the parameters of the set with index 4 and the   with the parameters of the set with index 1.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 20107.  Relationship to Other MIB Modules   Besides the usual imports from the SNMP Standards [RFC2578],   [RFC2579], and [RFC2580], the IPFIX MIB module references the ENTITY   MIB module [RFC4133] and the IF MIB module [RFC2863].7.1.  Relationship to the ENTITY MIB and IF MIB   The Observation Point table (ipfixObservationPointTable) contains a   reference to the ENTITY MIB module[RFC4133]   (ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntity) or the IF MIB module [RFC2863]   (ipfixObservationPointPhysicalInterface).  If the implementors of the   IPFIX MIB module want to specify the physical entity where Flows are   observed, then they SHOULD also implement the ENTITY MIB and/or the   IF MIB module.  The implementation of the ENTITY MIB and/or IF MIB   module is OPTIONAL.  If one of them is not implemented, then all   values of the respective column ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntity   or ipfixObservationPointPhysicalInterface in the Observation Point   table are zero and the values of the   ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntityDirection columns are unknown(0),   if none of them are defined.7.2.  MIB Modules Required for IMPORTS   The IPFIX MIB module requires the modules SNMPv2-SMI [RFC2578],   SNMPv2-TC [RFC2579], and SNMPv2-CONF [RFC2580].  Further on, it   imports the textual conventions InetAddressType and InetAddress from   the INET ADDRESS MIB module [RFC4001].   The IPFIX SELECTOR MIB module also requires the modules SNMPv2-SMI   [RFC2578], SNMPv2-TC [RFC2579], and SNMPv2-CONF [RFC2580].8.  MIB Definitions   This section contains the definitions of the IPFIX-MIB module and the   IPFIX-SELECTOR-MIB module.  There are different mandatory groups   defined for Collector and Exporter implementations.  The statistical   objects are made OPTIONAL.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 20108.1.  IPFIX MIB Definition   IPFIX-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN   IMPORTS       MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE, mib-2, Unsigned32, Counter64,       Gauge32           FROM SNMPv2-SMI                                --RFC2578       TimeStamp, DateAndTime           FROM SNMPv2-TC                                 --RFC2579       MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP           FROM SNMPv2-CONF                               --RFC2580       InterfaceIndexOrZero           FROM IF-MIB                                    --RFC2863       InetAddressType, InetAddress, InetPortNumber           FROM INET-ADDRESS-MIB                          --RFC4001       PhysicalIndexOrZero           FROM ENTITY-MIB;                               --RFC4133   ipfixMIB MODULE-IDENTITY       LAST-UPDATED "201004190000Z"         -- 19 April 2010       ORGANIZATION "IETF IPFIX Working Group"       CONTACT-INFO           "WG charter:http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/ipfix-charter.html           Mailing Lists:             General Discussion: ipfix@ietf.org             To Subscribe:http://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ipfix             Archive:http://www1.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/ipfix/current/index.html           Editor:             Thomas Dietz             NEC Europe Ltd.             NEC Laboratories Europe             Network Research Division             Kurfuersten-Anlage 36             69115 Heidelberg             Germany             Phone: +49 6221 4342-128             Email: Thomas.Dietz@nw.neclab.euDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010             Atsushi Kobayashi             NTT Information Sharing Platform Laboratories             3-9-11 Midori-cho             Musashino-shi             180-8585             Japan             Phone: +81-422-59-3978             Email: akoba@nttv6.net             Benoit Claise             Cisco Systems, Inc.             De Kleetlaan 6a b1             Degem 1831             Belgium             Phone:  +32 2 704 5622             Email: bclaise@cisco.com             Gerhard Muenz             Technische Universitaet Muenchen             Department of Informatics             Chair for Network Architectures and Services (I8)             Boltzmannstr. 3             85748 Garching             Germany             Phone: +49 89 289-18008             Email: muenz@net.in.tum.de             URI:http://www.net.in.tum.de/~muenz"       DESCRIPTION           "The IPFIX MIB defines managed objects for IP Flow           Information eXport.  These objects provide information about           managed nodes supporting the IPFIX protocol,           for Exporters as well as for Collectors.           Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as           authors of the code.  All rights reserved.           Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or           without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject           to the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD           License set forth inSection 4.c of the IETF Trust's           Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents           (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info)."Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   --  Revision history        REVISION     "201004190000Z"         -- 19 April 2010        DESCRIPTION           "Initial version, published asRFC 5815."       ::= { mib-2 193 }   --******************************************************************   -- Top Level Structure of the MIB   --******************************************************************   ipfixObjects     OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ipfixMIB 1 }   ipfixConformance OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ipfixMIB 2 }   ipfixMainObjects OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ipfixObjects 1 }   ipfixStatistics  OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ipfixObjects 2 }   --==================================================================   -- 1.1: Objects used by all IPFIX implementations   --==================================================================   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.1.1: Transport Session Table   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixTransportSessionTable  OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF IpfixTransportSessionEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This table lists the currently established Transport           Sessions between an Exporting Process and a Collecting           Process."       ::= { ipfixMainObjects 1 }   ipfixTransportSessionEntry OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      IpfixTransportSessionEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Defines an entry in the ipfixTransportSessionTable."       INDEX       { ipfixTransportSessionIndex }       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionTable 1 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   IpfixTransportSessionEntry ::=       SEQUENCE {          ipfixTransportSessionIndex                  Unsigned32,          ipfixTransportSessionProtocol               Unsigned32,          ipfixTransportSessionSourceAddressType      InetAddressType,          ipfixTransportSessionSourceAddress          InetAddress,          ipfixTransportSessionDestinationAddressType InetAddressType,          ipfixTransportSessionDestinationAddress     InetAddress,          ipfixTransportSessionSourcePort             InetPortNumber,          ipfixTransportSessionDestinationPort        InetPortNumber,          ipfixTransportSessionSctpAssocId            Unsigned32,          ipfixTransportSessionDeviceMode             INTEGER,          ipfixTransportSessionTemplateRefreshTimeout Unsigned32,          ipfixTransportSessionOptionsTemplateRefreshTimeout Unsigned32,          ipfixTransportSessionTemplateRefreshPacket  Unsigned32,          ipfixTransportSessionOptionsTemplateRefreshPacket Unsigned32,          ipfixTransportSessionIpfixVersion           Unsigned32,          ipfixTransportSessionStatus                 INTEGER       }   ipfixTransportSessionIndex OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Locally arbitrary, but unique identifier of an entry in           the ipfixTransportSessionTable.  The value is expected to           remain constant from a re-initialization of the entity's           network management agent to the next re-initialization."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 1 }   ipfixTransportSessionProtocol OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..255)       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The transport protocol used for receiving or transmitting           IPFIX Messages.  Protocol numbers are assigned by IANA.  A           current list of all assignments is available from           <http://www.iana.org/>."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow           Information Export (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP           Traffic Flow Information,Section 10."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 2 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   ipfixTransportSessionSourceAddressType OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      InetAddressType       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The type of address used for the source address,           as specified inRFC 4001.  This object is used with protocols           (specified in ipfixTransportSessionProtocol) like TCP (6)           and UDP (17) that have the notion of addresses.  SCTP (132)           should use the ipfixTransportSessionSctpAssocId instead.           If SCTP (132) or any other protocol without the notion of           addresses is used, the object MUST be set to unknown(0)."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 3 }   ipfixTransportSessionSourceAddress OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      InetAddress       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The source address of the Exporter of the IPFIX Transport           Session.  This value is interpreted according to the value of           ipfixTransportSessionAddressType as specified inRFC 4001.           This object is used with protocols (specified in           ipfixTransportSessionProtocol) like TCP (6) and UDP (17) that           have the notion of addresses.  SCTP (132) should use the           ipfixTransportSessionSctpAssocId instead.  If SCTP (132) or           any other protocol without the notion of addresses is used,           the object MUST be set to a zero-length string."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 4 }   ipfixTransportSessionDestinationAddressType OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      InetAddressType       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The type of address used for the destination address,           as specified inRFC 4001.  This object is used with protocols           (specified in ipfixTransportSessionProtocol) like TCP (6)           and UDP (17) that have the notion of addresses.  SCTP (132)           should use the ipfixTransportSessionSctpAssocId instead.           If SCTP (132) or any other protocol without the notion of           addresses is used, the object MUST be set to unknown(0)."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 5 }   ipfixTransportSessionDestinationAddress OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      InetAddress       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      currentDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       DESCRIPTION           "The destination address of the Collector of the IPFIX           Transport Session.  This value is interpreted according to           the value of ipfixTransportSessionAddressType, as specified           inRFC 4001.  This object is used with protocols           (specified in ipfixTransportSessionProtocol) like TCP (6)           and UDP (17) that have the notion of addresses.  SCTP (132)           should use the ipfixTransportSessionSctpAssocId instead.           If SCTP (132) or any other protocol without the notion of           addresses is used, the object MUST be set to a zero-length           string"       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 6 }   ipfixTransportSessionSourcePort OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      InetPortNumber       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The transport protocol port number of the Exporter.           This object is used with protocols (specified in           ipfixTransportSessionProtocol) like TCP (6)           and UDP (17) that have the notion of ports.  SCTP (132)           should copy the value of sctpAssocLocalPort if the           Transport Session is in collecting mode or           sctpAssocRemPort if the Transport Session is in           exporting mode.  The association is referenced           by the ipfixTransportSessionSctpAssocId.           If any other protocol without the notion of           ports is used, the object MUST be set to zero."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 7 }   ipfixTransportSessionDestinationPort OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      InetPortNumber       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The transport protocol port number of the Collector.  The           default value is 4739 for all currently defined transport           protocol types.  This object is used with protocols           (specified in ipfixTransportSessionProtocol) like TCP (6)           and UDP (17) that have the notion of ports.  SCTP (132)           should copy the value of sctpAssocRemPort if the           Transport Session is in collecting mode or           sctpAssocLocalPort if the Transport Session is in           exporting mode.  The association is referenced           by the ipfixTransportSessionSctpAssocId.           If any other protocol without the notion of           ports is used, the object MUST be set to zero."Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 8 }   ipfixTransportSessionSctpAssocId OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The association id used for the SCTP session between the           Exporter and the Collector of the IPFIX Transport Session.           It is equal to the sctpAssocId entry in the sctpAssocTable           defined in the SCTP MIB.  This object is only valid if           ipfixTransportSessionProtocol has the value 132 (SCTP).  In           all other cases, the value MUST be zero."       REFERENCE           "RFC 3873, Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP)           Management Information Base (MIB)."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 9 }   ipfixTransportSessionDeviceMode OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      INTEGER {                       exporting(1),                       collecting(2)                   }       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The mode of operation of the device for the given Transport           Session.  This object can have the following values:           exporting(1)               This value MUST be used if the Transport Session is               used for exporting Records to other IPFIX Devices,               i.e., this device acts as Exporter.           collecting(2)               This value MUST be used if the Transport Session is               used for collecting Records from other IPFIX Devices,               i.e., this device acts as Collector."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 10 }   ipfixTransportSessionTemplateRefreshTimeout OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32       UNITS       "seconds"       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      currentDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       DESCRIPTION           "On Exporters, this object contains the time in seconds           after which IPFIX Templates are resent by the           Exporter.           On Collectors, this object contains the lifetime in seconds           after which a Template becomes invalid when it is not           received again within this lifetime.           This object is only valid if ipfixTransportSessionProtocol           has the value 17 (UDP).  In all other cases, the value MUST           be zero."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information, Sections10.3.6 and10.3.7."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 11 }   ipfixTransportSessionOptionsTemplateRefreshTimeout OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32       UNITS       "seconds"       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "On Exporters, this object contains the time in seconds           after which IPFIX Options Templates are resent by the           Exporter.           On Collectors, this object contains the lifetime in seconds           after which an Options Template becomes invalid when it is           not received again within this lifetime.           This object is only valid if ipfixTransportSessionProtocol           has the value 17 (UDP).  In all other cases the value MUST           be zero."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information, Sections10.3.6 and10.3.7."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 12 }   ipfixTransportSessionTemplateRefreshPacket OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32       UNITS       "packets"       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      currentDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       DESCRIPTION           "On Exporters, this object contains the number of exported           IPFIX Messages after which IPFIX Templates are resent           by the Exporter.           On Collectors, this object contains the lifetime in number           of exported IPFIX Messages after which a Template becomes           invalid when it is not received again within this lifetime.           This object is only valid if ipfixTransportSessionProtocol           has the value 17 (UDP).  In all other cases the value MUST           be zero."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information, Sections10.3.6 and10.3.7."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 13 }   ipfixTransportSessionOptionsTemplateRefreshPacket OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32       UNITS       "packets"       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "On Exporters, this object contains the number of exported           IPFIX Messages after which IPFIX Options Templates are           resent by the Exporter.           On Collectors, this object contains the lifetime in number           of exported IPFIX Messages after which an Options Template           becomes invalid when it is not received again within this           lifetime.           This object is only valid if ipfixTransportSessionProtocol           has the value 17 (UDP).  In all other cases the value MUST           be zero."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information, Sections10.3.6 and10.3.7."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 14 }   ipfixTransportSessionIpfixVersion OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..65535)       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      currentDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       DESCRIPTION           "On Exporters the object contains the version number of the           IPFIX protocol that the Exporter uses to export its data in           this Transport Session.           On Collectors the object contains the version number of the           IPFIX protocol it receives for this Transport Session.           If IPFIX Messages of different IPFIX protocol versions are           transmitted or received in this Transport Session, this           object contains the maximum version number."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information,Section 3.1."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 15 }   ipfixTransportSessionStatus OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      INTEGER {                       unknown(0),                       inactive(1),                       active(2)                   }       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The status of a Transport Session.  This object can have the           following values:           unknown(0)               This value MUST be used if the status of the               Transport Session cannot be detected by the equipment.               This value should be avoided as far as possible.           inactive(1)               This value MUST be used for Transport Sessions that               are specified in the system but are not currently active.               The value can be used, e.g., for Transport Sessions that               are backup (secondary) sessions in a Transport Session               group.           active(2)               This value MUST be used for Transport Sessions that are               currently active and transmitting or receiving data."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionEntry 16 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.1.2: Template Table   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixTemplateTable  OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF IpfixTemplateEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This table lists the Templates and Options Templates that           are transmitted by the Exporting Process or received by the           Collecting Process.           The table contains the Templates and Options Templates that           are received or used for exporting data for a given           Transport Session group and Observation Domain.           Withdrawn or invalidated (Options) Template MUST be removed           from this table."       ::= { ipfixMainObjects 2 }   ipfixTemplateEntry OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      IpfixTemplateEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Defines an entry in the ipfixTemplateTable."       INDEX       {           ipfixTransportSessionIndex,           ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId,           ipfixTemplateId       }       ::= { ipfixTemplateTable 1 }   IpfixTemplateEntry ::=       SEQUENCE {           ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId Unsigned32,           ipfixTemplateId                  Unsigned32,           ipfixTemplateSetId               Unsigned32,           ipfixTemplateAccessTime          DateAndTime       }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..4294967295)       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The Id of the Observation Domain for which this Template           is defined.  This value is used when sending IPFIX Messages.           The special value of 0 indicates that the Data Records           exported with this (Option Template) cannot be applied to a           single Observation Domain."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information,Section 3.1."       ::= { ipfixTemplateEntry 1 }   ipfixTemplateId OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (256..65535)       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This number indicates the Template Id in the IPFIX           Message.  Values from 0 to 255 are not allowed for Template           Ids."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information,Section 3.4.1."       ::= { ipfixTemplateEntry 2 }   ipfixTemplateSetId OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..65535)       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This number indicates the Set Id of the Template.  This           object allows to easily retrieve the Template type.           Currently, there are two values defined.  The value 2 is           used for Sets containing Template definitions.  The value 3           is used for Sets containing Options Template definitions."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information,Section 3.3.2."       ::= { ipfixTemplateEntry 3 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   ipfixTemplateAccessTime OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      DateAndTime       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "If the Transport Session is in exporting mode           (ipfixTransportSessionDeviceMode) the time when this           (Options) Template was last sent to the Collector(s).           In the specific case of UDP as transport protocol, this           time is used to know when a retransmission of the           (Options) Template is needed.           If it is in collecting mode, this object contains the           time when this (Options) Template was last received from           the Exporter.  In the specific case of UDP as transport           protocol, this time is used to know when this (Options)           Template times out and thus is no longer valid."       ::= { ipfixTemplateEntry 4 }   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.1.3: Exported Template Definition Table   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixTemplateDefinitionTable  OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF IpfixTemplateDefinitionEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "On Exporters, this table lists the (Options) Template fields           of which a (Options) Template is defined.  It defines the           (Options) Template given in the ipfixTemplateId specified in           the ipfixTemplateTable.           On Collectors, this table lists the (Options) Template fields           of which a (Options) Template is defined.  It defines the           (Options) Template given in the ipfixTemplateId specified in           the ipfixTemplateTable."       ::= { ipfixMainObjects 3 }   ipfixTemplateDefinitionEntry OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      IpfixTemplateDefinitionEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Defines an entry in the ipfixTemplateDefinitionTable."Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       INDEX       {           ipfixTransportSessionIndex,           ipfixTemplateObservationDomainId,           ipfixTemplateId,           ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex       }       ::= { ipfixTemplateDefinitionTable 1 }   IpfixTemplateDefinitionEntry ::=       SEQUENCE {           ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex            Unsigned32,           ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeId             Unsigned32,           ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeLength         Unsigned32,           ipfixTemplateDefinitionEnterpriseNumber Unsigned32,           ipfixTemplateDefinitionFlags            BITS       }   ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..65535)       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex specifies the order in           which the Information Elements are used in the (Options)           Template Record.           Since a Template Record can contain a maximum of 65535           Information Elements, the index is limited to this value."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information, Sections3.4.1 and3.4.2."       ::= { ipfixTemplateDefinitionEntry 1 }   ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeId OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..65535)       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This indicates the Information Element Id at position           ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex in the (Options) Template           ipfixTemplateId.  This implicitly specifies the data type           of the Information Element.  The elements are registered           at IANA.  A current list of assignments can be found at           <http://www.iana.org/assignments/ipfix>"Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information,Section 3.2.RFC 5102, Information Model for IP Flow Information Export."       ::= { ipfixTemplateDefinitionEntry 2 }   ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeLength OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..65535)       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This indicates the length of the Information Element Id at           position ipfixTemplateDefinitionIndex in the (Options)           Template ipfixTemplateId."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information,Section 3.2.RFC 5102, Information Model for IP Flow Information Export."       ::= { ipfixTemplateDefinitionEntry 3 }   ipfixTemplateDefinitionEnterpriseNumber OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "IANA enterprise number of the authority defining the           Information Element identifier in this Template Record.           Enterprise numbers are assigned by IANA.  A current list of           all assignments is available from           <http://www.iana.org/assignments/enterprise-numbers/>.           This object must be zero(0) for all standard Information           Elements registered with IANA.  A current list of these           elements is available from           <http://www.iana.org/assignments/ipfix/ipfix.xhtml>."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information,Section 3.2.RFC 5102, Information Model for IP Flow Information Export."       ::= { ipfixTemplateDefinitionEntry 4 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   ipfixTemplateDefinitionFlags OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      BITS {                       scope(0),                       flowKey(1)                   }       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This bitmask indicates special attributes for the           Information Element:           scope(0)               This Information Element is used for scope.           flowKey(1)               This Information Element is a Flow Key.           Thus, we get the following values for an Information Element:           If neither bit scope(0) nor bit flowKey(1) are set               The Information Element is neither used for scoping nor               as Flow Key.           If only bit scope(0) is set               The Information Element is used for scoping.           If only bit flowKey(1) is set               The Information Element is used as Flow Key.           Both bit scope(0) and flowKey(1) MUST NOT be set at the same           time.  This combination is not allowed."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information           Export (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic Flow           Information, Sections2 and3.4.2.1.RFC 5102, Information Model for IP Flow Information Export."       ::= { ipfixTemplateDefinitionEntry 5 }   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.1.4: Export Table   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixExportTable  OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF IpfixExportEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This table lists all exports of an IPFIX device.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 34]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010           On Exporters, this table contains all exports grouped by           Transport Session, Observation Domain Id, Template Id, and           Metering Process represented by the           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId.  Thanks to the ipfixExportIndex,           the exports can group one or more Transport Sessions to           achieve a special functionality like failover management,           load-balancing, etc.  The entries with the same           ipfixExportIndex, ipfixObservationDomainId,           and ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId define a Transport           Session group.  If the Exporter does not use Transport           Session grouping, then each ipfixExportIndex contains a           single ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId and thus a singe           Transport Session, and this session MUST have the member           type primary(1).  Transport Sessions referenced in this           table MUST have the ipfixTransportSessionDeviceMode           exporting(1).           On Collectors, this table is not needed."       ::= { ipfixMainObjects 4 }   ipfixExportEntry OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      IpfixExportEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Defines an entry in the ipfixExportTable."       INDEX       {           ipfixExportIndex,           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId,           ipfixTransportSessionIndex       }       ::= { ipfixExportTable 1 }   IpfixExportEntry ::=       SEQUENCE {          ipfixExportIndex      Unsigned32,          ipfixExportMemberType INTEGER       }   ipfixExportIndex OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Locally arbitrary, but unique identifier of an entry in           the ipfixExportTable.  The value is expected           to remain constant from a re-initialization of the entity's           network management agent to the next re-initialization.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 35]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010           A common ipfixExportIndex between two entries from this           table expresses that there is a relationship between the           Transport Sessions in ipfixTransportSessionIndex.  The type           of relationship is expressed by the value of           ipfixExportMemberType."       ::= { ipfixExportEntry 1 }   ipfixExportMemberType OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      INTEGER {                       unknown(0),                       primary(1),                       secondary(2),                       parallel(3),                       loadBalancing(4)                   }       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The type of a member Transport Session in a Transport           Session group (identified by the value of ipfixExportIndex,           ipfixObservationDomainId, and ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId).           The following values are valid:           unknown(0)               This value MUST be used if the status of the group               membership cannot be detected by the equipment.  This               value should be avoided as far as possible.           primary(1)               This value is used for a group member that is used as               the primary target of an Exporter.  Other group members               (with the same ipfixExportIndex and               ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId) MUST NOT have the value               primary(1) but MUST have the value secondary(2).               This value MUST also be specified if the Exporter does               not support Transport Session grouping.  In this case,               the group contains only one Transport Session.           secondary(2)               This value is used for a group member that is used as a               secondary target of an Exporter.  The Exporter will use               one of the targets specified as secondary(2) within the               same Transport Session group when the primary target is               not reachable.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 36]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010           parallel(3)               This value is used for a group member that is used for               duplicate exporting, i.e., all group members identified               by the ipfixExportIndex are exporting the same Records               in parallel.  This implies that all group members MUST               have the same membertype parallel(3).           loadBalancing(4)               This value is used for a group member that is used               as one target for load-balancing.  This means that a               Record is sent to one of the group members in this               group identified by ipfixExportIndex.               This implies that all group members MUST have the same               membertype loadBalancing(4)."       ::= { ipfixExportEntry 2 }   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.1.5: Metering Process Table   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixMeteringProcessTable  OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF IpfixMeteringProcessEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This table lists so-called caches used at the Metering           Process to store the metering data of Flows observed at           the Observation Points given in the           ipfixObservationPointGroupReference.  The table lists the           timeouts that specify when the cached metering data is           expired.           On Collectors, the table is not needed."       ::= { ipfixMainObjects 5 }   ipfixMeteringProcessEntry OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      IpfixMeteringProcessEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Defines an entry in the ipfixMeteringProcessTable."       INDEX       { ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId }       ::= { ipfixMeteringProcessTable 1 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 37]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   IpfixMeteringProcessEntry ::=       SEQUENCE {           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId              Unsigned32,           ipfixMeteringProcessObservationPointGroupRef Unsigned32,           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheActiveTimeout   Unsigned32,           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheInactiveTimeout Unsigned32       }   ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Locally arbitrary, but unique identifier of an entry in the           ipfixMeterinProcessTable.  The value is expected to remain           constant from a re-initialization of the entity's network           management agent to the next re-initialization."       ::= { ipfixMeteringProcessEntry 1 }   ipfixMeteringProcessObservationPointGroupRef OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The Observation Point Group Id that links this table entry           to the ipfixObservationPointTable.  The matching           ipfixObservationPointGroupId in that table gives the           Observation Points used in that cache.  If the Observation           Points are unknown, the           ipfixMeteringProcessObservationPointGroupRef MUST be zero."       ::= { ipfixMeteringProcessEntry 2 }   ipfixMeteringProcessCacheActiveTimeout OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32       UNITS       "seconds"       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "On the Exporter, this object contains the time after which a           Flow is expired (and a Data Record for the template is sent)           even though packets matching this Flow are still received by           the Metering Process.  If this value is 0, the Flow is not           prematurely expired."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5470, Architecture for IP Flow Information Export,Section 5.1.1, item 3."       ::= { ipfixMeteringProcessEntry 3 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 38]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   ipfixMeteringProcessCacheInactiveTimeout OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32       UNITS       "seconds"       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "On the Exporter. this object contains the time after which a           Flow is expired (and a Data Record for the template is sent)           when no packets matching this Flow are received by the           Metering Process for the given number of seconds.  If this           value is zero, the Flow is expired immediately, i.e., a Data           Record is sent for every packet received by the Metering           Process."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5470, Architecture for IP Flow Information Export,Section 5.1.1, item 1"       ::= { ipfixMeteringProcessEntry 4 }   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.1.6: Observation Point Table   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixObservationPointTable  OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF IpfixObservationPointEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This table lists the Observation Points used within an           Exporter by the Metering Process. The index           ipfixObservationPointGroupId groups Observation Points           and is referenced in the Metering Process table.           On Collectors this table is not needed."       ::= { ipfixMainObjects 6 }   ipfixObservationPointEntry OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      IpfixObservationPointEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Defines an entry in the ipfixObservationPointTable."       INDEX       {           ipfixObservationPointGroupId,           ipfixObservationPointIndex       }       ::= { ipfixObservationPointTable 1 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 39]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   IpfixObservationPointEntry ::=       SEQUENCE {           ipfixObservationPointGroupId           Unsigned32,           ipfixObservationPointIndex             Unsigned32,           ipfixObservationPointObservationDomainId Unsigned32,           ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntity    PhysicalIndexOrZero,           ipfixObservationPointPhysicalInterface InterfaceIndexOrZero,           ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntityDirection INTEGER       }   ipfixObservationPointGroupId OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Locally arbitrary, but unique identifier of an entry in the           ipfixObservationPointTable.  The value is expected to remain           constant from a re-initialization of the entity's network           management agent to the next re-initialization.           This index represents a group of Observation Points.           The special value of 0 MUST NOT be used within this table           but is reserved for the usage in the           ipfixMeteringProcessTable.  An index of 0 for the           ipfixObservationPointGroupReference index in that table           indicates that an Observation Point is unknown or           unspecified for a Metering Process cache."       ::= { ipfixObservationPointEntry 1 }   ipfixObservationPointIndex OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Locally arbitrary, but unique identifier of an entry in the           ipfixObservationPointTable.  The value is expected to remain           constant from a re-initialization of the entity's network           management agent to the next re-initialization.           This index represents a single Observation Point in an           Observation Point group."       ::= { ipfixObservationPointEntry 2 }   ipfixObservationPointObservationDomainId OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      currentDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 40]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       DESCRIPTION           "The Id of the Observation Domain in which this           Observation Point is included.           The special value of 0 indicates that the Observation           Points within this group cannot be applied to a single           Observation Domain."       REFERENCE           "RFC 5101, Specification of the IP Flow Information Export           (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP           Traffic Flow Information,Section 3.1."       ::= { ipfixObservationPointEntry 3 }   ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntity OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      PhysicalIndexOrZero       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This object contains the index of a physical entity in           the ENTITY MIB.  This physical entity is the given           Observation Point.  If such a physical entity cannot be           specified or is not known, then the object is zero."       ::= { ipfixObservationPointEntry 4 }   ipfixObservationPointPhysicalInterface OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      InterfaceIndexOrZero       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This object contains the index of a physical interface in           the IF MIB.  This physical interface is the given           Observation Point.  If such a physical interface cannot be           specified or is not known, then the object is zero.           This object MAY be used stand alone or in addition to           ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntity.  If           ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntity is not zero, this object           MUST point to the same physical interface that is           referenced in ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntity.           Otherwise, it may reference any interface in the IF MIB."       ::= { ipfixObservationPointEntry 5 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 41]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntityDirection OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      INTEGER {                       unknown(0),                       ingress(1),                       egress(2),                       both(3)                   }       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The direction of the Flow that is monitored on the given           physical entity.  The following values are valid:           unknown(0)               This value MUST be used if a direction is not               known for the given physical entity.           ingress(1)               This value is used for monitoring incoming Flows on the               given physical entity.           egress(2)               This value is used for monitoring outgoing Flows on the               given physical entity.           both(3)               This value is used for monitoring incoming and outgoing               Flows on the given physical entity."       ::= { ipfixObservationPointEntry 6 }   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.1.7: Selection Process Table   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixSelectionProcessTable OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF IpfixSelectionProcessEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This table contains Selector Functions connected to a           Metering Process by the index ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId.           The Selector Functions are grouped into Selection Processes           by the ipfixSelectionProcessIndex.  The Selector Functions           are applied within the Selection Process to the packets           observed for the given Metering Process cache in increasing           order implied by the ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorIndex.           This means Selector Functions with lower           ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorIndex are applied first.  The           remaining packets are accounted for in Flow Records.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 42]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010           Since IPFIX does not define any Selector Function (except           selecting every packet), this is a placeholder for future           use and a guideline for implementing enterprise-specific           Selector Function objects.           The following object tree should visualize how the           Selector Function objects should be implemented:           ipfixSelectorFunctions           |           +- ipfixFuncSelectAll           |  |           |  +- ipfixFuncSelectAllAvail (is the function available?)           |           +- ipfixFuncF2           |  |           |  +- ipfixFuncF2Avail (is the function F2 available?)           |  |           |  +- ipfixFuncF2Parameters (a table with parameters)           ...           |           +- ipfixFunFn...           If a Selector Function takes parameters, the MIB should           contain a table with an entry for each set of parameters           used at the Exporter."       ::= { ipfixMainObjects 7 }   ipfixSelectionProcessEntry OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      IpfixSelectionProcessEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Defines an entry in the ipfixSelectionProcessTable."       INDEX       {           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId,           ipfixSelectionProcessIndex,           ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorIndex       }       ::= { ipfixSelectionProcessTable 1 }   IpfixSelectionProcessEntry ::= SEQUENCE {           ipfixSelectionProcessIndex            Unsigned32,           ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorIndex    Unsigned32,           ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorFunction OBJECT IDENTIFIER       }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 43]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   ipfixSelectionProcessIndex OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Locally arbitrary, but unique identifier of an entry in the           ipfixSelectionProcessTable.  The value is expected to remain           constant from a re-initialization of the entity's network           management agent to the next re-initialization."       ::= { ipfixSelectionProcessEntry 1 }   ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorIndex OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Index specifying the order in which the referenced           ipfixSelctionProcessSelectorFunctions are applied to the           observed packet stream within the given Selection Process           (identified by the ipfixSelectionProcessIndex).  The           Selector Functions are applied in increasing order, i.e.,           Selector Functions with lower index are applied first."       ::= { ipfixSelectionProcessEntry 2 }   ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorFunction OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      OBJECT IDENTIFIER       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The pointer to the Selector Function used at position           ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorIndex in the list of Selector           Functions for the Metering Process cache specified by the           index ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId and for the given           Selection Process (identified by the           ipfixSelectionProcessIndex).           This usually points to an object in the IPFIX SELECTOR MIB.           If the Selector Function does not take parameters, then it           MUST point to the root of the function subtree.  If the           function takes parameters, then it MUST point to an entry           in the parameter table of the Selector Function."       ::= { ipfixSelectionProcessEntry 3 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 44]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.2.1: Transport Session Statistics Table   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixTransportSessionStatsTable  OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF IpfixTransportSessionStatsEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This table lists Transport Sessions statistics between           Exporting Processes and Collecting Processes."       ::= { ipfixStatistics 1 }   ipfixTransportSessionStatsEntry OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      IpfixTransportSessionStatsEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Defines an entry in the ipfixTransportSessionStatsTable."       AUGMENTS    { ipfixTransportSessionEntry }       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionStatsTable 1 }   IpfixTransportSessionStatsEntry ::=       SEQUENCE {           ipfixTransportSessionRate              Gauge32,           ipfixTransportSessionPackets           Counter64,           ipfixTransportSessionBytes             Counter64,           ipfixTransportSessionMessages          Counter64,           ipfixTransportSessionDiscardedMessages Counter64,           ipfixTransportSessionRecords           Counter64,           ipfixTransportSessionTemplates         Counter64,           ipfixTransportSessionOptionsTemplates  Counter64,           ipfixTransportSessionDiscontinuityTime TimeStamp       }   ipfixTransportSessionRate OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Gauge32       UNITS       "bytes/second"       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The number of bytes per second received by the           Collector or transmitted by the Exporter.  A           value of zero (0) means that no packets were sent or           received, yet.  This object is updated every second."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionStatsEntry 1 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 45]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   ipfixTransportSessionPackets OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Counter64       UNITS       "packets"       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The number of packets received by the Collector           or transmitted by the Exporter.           Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at           re-initialization of the management system and at other           times as indicated by the value of           ipfixTransportSessionDiscontinuityTime."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionStatsEntry 2 }   ipfixTransportSessionBytes OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Counter64       UNITS       "bytes"       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The number of bytes received by the Collector           or transmitted by the Exporter.           Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at           re-initialization of the management system and at other           times as indicated by the value of           ipfixTransportSessionDiscontinuityTime."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionStatsEntry 3 }   ipfixTransportSessionMessages OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Counter64       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The number of IPFIX Messages received by the           Collector or transmitted by the Exporter.           Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at           re-initialization of the management system and at other           times as indicated by the value of           ipfixTransportSessionDiscontinuityTime."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionStatsEntry 4 }   ipfixTransportSessionDiscardedMessages OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Counter64       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      currentDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 46]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       DESCRIPTION           "The number of received IPFIX Message that are malformed,           cannot be decoded, are received in the wrong order, or are           missing according to the sequence number.           If used at the Exporter, the number of messages that could           not be sent due to, e.g., internal buffer overflows, network           congestion, or routing issues.           Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at           re-initialization of the management system and at other           times as indicated by the value of           ipfixTransportSessionDiscontinuityTime."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionStatsEntry 5 }   ipfixTransportSessionRecords OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Counter64       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The number of Data Records received by the Collector or           transmitted by the Exporter.           Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at           re-initialization of the management system and at other           times as indicated by the value of           ipfixTransportSessionDiscontinuityTime."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionStatsEntry 6 }   ipfixTransportSessionTemplates OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Counter64       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The number of Templates received or transmitted.           Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at           re-initialization of the management system and at other           times as indicated by the value of           ipfixTransportSessionDiscontinuityTime."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionStatsEntry 7 }   ipfixTransportSessionOptionsTemplates OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Counter64       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      currentDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 47]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       DESCRIPTION           "The number of Options Templates received or transmitted.           Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at           re-initialization of the management system and at other           times as indicated by the value of           ipfixTransportSessionDiscontinuityTime."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionStatsEntry 8 }   ipfixTransportSessionDiscontinuityTime OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX       TimeStamp       MAX-ACCESS   read-only       STATUS       current       DESCRIPTION           "The value of sysUpTime at the most recent occasion at which           one or more of the Transport Session counters suffered a           discontinuity.           A value of zero indicates no such discontinuity has           occurred since the last re-initialization of the local           management subsystem."       ::= { ipfixTransportSessionStatsEntry 9 }   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.2.2: Template Statistics Table   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixTemplateStatsTable  OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF IpfixTemplateStatsEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This table lists statistics objects per Template."       ::= { ipfixStatistics 2 }   ipfixTemplateStatsEntry OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      IpfixTemplateStatsEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Defines an entry in the ipfixTemplateStatsTable."       AUGMENTS    { ipfixTemplateEntry }       ::= { ipfixTemplateStatsTable 1 }   IpfixTemplateStatsEntry ::=       SEQUENCE {           ipfixTemplateDataRecords       Counter64,           ipfixTemplateDiscontinuityTime TimeStamp       }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 48]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   ipfixTemplateDataRecords OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Counter64       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The number of Data Records that are transmitted or received           per Template.           Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at           re-initialization of the management system, and at other           times as indicated by the value of           ipfixTemplateDiscontinuityTime."       ::= { ipfixTemplateStatsEntry 1 }   ipfixTemplateDiscontinuityTime OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX       TimeStamp       MAX-ACCESS   read-only       STATUS       current       DESCRIPTION           "The value of sysUpTime at the most recent occasion at which           the Template counter suffered a discontinuity.           A value of zero indicates no such discontinuity has           occurred since the last re-initialization of the local           management subsystem."       ::= { ipfixTemplateStatsEntry 2 }   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.2.3: Metering Process Statistics Table   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixMeteringProcessStatsTable  OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF IpfixMeteringProcessStatsEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This table lists statistic objects that have data per           Metering Process cache.           On Collectors, this table is not needed."       ::= { ipfixStatistics 3 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 49]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   ipfixMeteringProcessStatsEntry OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      IpfixMeteringProcessStatsEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Defines an entry in the ipfixMeteringProcessStatsTable."       AUGMENTS    { ipfixMeteringProcessEntry }       ::= { ipfixMeteringProcessStatsTable 1 }   IpfixMeteringProcessStatsEntry ::=       SEQUENCE {           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheActiveFlows          Gauge32,           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheUnusedCacheEntries   Gauge32,           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheDataRecords          Counter64,           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheDiscontinuityTime    TimeStamp       }   ipfixMeteringProcessCacheActiveFlows OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Gauge32       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The number of Flows currently active at this cache."       ::= { ipfixMeteringProcessStatsEntry 1 }   ipfixMeteringProcessCacheUnusedCacheEntries   OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Gauge32       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The number of unused cache entries."       ::= { ipfixMeteringProcessStatsEntry 2 }   ipfixMeteringProcessCacheDataRecords OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Counter64       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The number of Data Records generated.           Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at           re-initialization of the management system and at other           times as indicated by the value of           ipfixTemplateDiscontinuityTime."       ::= { ipfixMeteringProcessStatsEntry 3 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 50]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   ipfixMeteringProcessCacheDiscontinuityTime OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX       TimeStamp       MAX-ACCESS   read-only       STATUS       current       DESCRIPTION           "The value of sysUpTime at the most recent occasion at which           the Metering Process counter suffered a discontinuity.           A value of zero indicates no such discontinuity has           occurred since the last re-initialization of the local           management subsystem."       ::= { ipfixMeteringProcessStatsEntry 4 }   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.2.4: Selection Process Statistics Table   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixSelectionProcessStatsTable OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF IpfixSelectionProcessStatsEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This table contains statistics for the Selector Functions           connected to Metering Process by the index           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheId.           The indexes MUST match an entry in the           ipfixSelectionProcessTable."       ::= { ipfixStatistics 4 }   ipfixSelectionProcessStatsEntry OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      IpfixSelectionProcessStatsEntry       MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Defines an entry in the ipfixSelectionProcessStatsTable."       AUGMENTS    { ipfixSelectionProcessEntry }       ::= { ipfixSelectionProcessStatsTable 1 }   IpfixSelectionProcessStatsEntry ::= SEQUENCE {           ipfixSelectionProcessStatsPacketsObserved   Counter64,           ipfixSelectionProcessStatsPacketsDropped    Counter64,           ipfixSelectionProcessStatsDiscontinuityTime TimeStamp       }   ipfixSelectionProcessStatsPacketsObserved OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Counter64       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      currentDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 51]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       DESCRIPTION           "The number of packets observed at the entry point of the           function.  The entry point may be the Observation Point or           the exit point of another Selector Function.           Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at           re-initialization of the management system and at other           times as indicated by the value of           ipfixSelectionProcessStatsDiscontinuityTime."       ::= { ipfixSelectionProcessStatsEntry 1 }   ipfixSelectionProcessStatsPacketsDropped OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      Counter64       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The number of packets dropped while selecting packets.           Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at           re-initialization of the management system and at other           times as indicated by the value of           ipfixSelectionProcessStatsDiscontinuityTime."       ::= { ipfixSelectionProcessStatsEntry 2 }   ipfixSelectionProcessStatsDiscontinuityTime OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX       TimeStamp       MAX-ACCESS   read-only       STATUS       current       DESCRIPTION           "The value of sysUpTime at the most recent occasion at which           one or more of the Selector counters suffered a           discontinuity.           A value of zero indicates no such discontinuity has           occurred since the last re-initialization of the local           management subsystem."       ::= { ipfixSelectionProcessStatsEntry 3 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 52]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   --==================================================================   -- 2: Conformance Information   --==================================================================   ipfixCompliances OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ipfixConformance 1 }   ipfixGroups      OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { ipfixConformance 2 }   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 2.1: Compliance Statements   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixCollectorCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "An implementation that builds an IPFIX Collector           that complies to this module MUST implement the objects           defined in the mandatory group ipfixCommonGroup.           The implementation of all objects in the other groups is           optional and depends on the corresponding functionality           implemented in the equipment.           An implementation that is compliant to this MIB module           is limited to use only the values TCP (6), UDP (17), and           SCTP (132) in the ipfixTransportSessionProtocol object           because these are the only protocol currently specified           for usage within IPFIX (seeRFC 5101)."       MODULE  -- this module       MANDATORY-GROUPS {           ipfixCommonGroup       }       GROUP ipfixCommonStatsGroup       DESCRIPTION           "These objects should be implemented if the statistics           function is implemented in the equipment."       ::= { ipfixCompliances 1 }   ipfixExporterCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE       STATUS  current       DESCRIPTION           "An implementation that builds an IPFIX Exporter that           complies to this module MUST implement the objects defined           in the mandatory group ipfixCommonGroup.  The implementation           of all other objects depends on the implementation of the           corresponding functionality in the equipment."       MODULE  -- this moduleDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 53]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       MANDATORY-GROUPS {               ipfixCommonGroup,               ipfixExporterGroup       }       GROUP ipfixCommonStatsGroup       DESCRIPTION           "These objects should be implemented if the statistics           function is implemented in the equipment."       GROUP ipfixExporterStatsGroup       DESCRIPTION           "These objects MUST be implemented if statistical functions           are implemented on the equipment."       ::= { ipfixCompliances 2 }   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 2.2: MIB Grouping   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixCommonGroup OBJECT-GROUP       OBJECTS {           ipfixTransportSessionProtocol,           ipfixTransportSessionSourceAddressType,           ipfixTransportSessionSourceAddress,           ipfixTransportSessionDestinationAddressType,           ipfixTransportSessionDestinationAddress,           ipfixTransportSessionSourcePort,           ipfixTransportSessionDestinationPort,           ipfixTransportSessionSctpAssocId,           ipfixTransportSessionDeviceMode,           ipfixTransportSessionTemplateRefreshTimeout,           ipfixTransportSessionOptionsTemplateRefreshTimeout,           ipfixTransportSessionTemplateRefreshPacket,           ipfixTransportSessionOptionsTemplateRefreshPacket,           ipfixTransportSessionIpfixVersion,           ipfixTransportSessionStatus,           ipfixTemplateSetId,           ipfixTemplateAccessTime,           ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeId,           ipfixTemplateDefinitionIeLength,           ipfixTemplateDefinitionEnterpriseNumber,           ipfixTemplateDefinitionFlags       }       STATUS      currentDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 54]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       DESCRIPTION           "The main IPFIX objects."       ::= { ipfixGroups 1 }   ipfixCommonStatsGroup OBJECT-GROUP       OBJECTS {           ipfixTransportSessionRate,           ipfixTransportSessionPackets,           ipfixTransportSessionBytes,           ipfixTransportSessionMessages,           ipfixTransportSessionDiscardedMessages,           ipfixTransportSessionRecords,           ipfixTransportSessionTemplates,           ipfixTransportSessionOptionsTemplates,           ipfixTransportSessionDiscontinuityTime,           ipfixTemplateDataRecords,           ipfixTemplateDiscontinuityTime       }       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "Common statistical objects."       ::= { ipfixGroups 2 }   ipfixExporterGroup OBJECT-GROUP       OBJECTS {           ipfixExportMemberType,           ipfixMeteringProcessObservationPointGroupRef,           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheActiveTimeout,           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheInactiveTimeout,           ipfixObservationPointObservationDomainId,           ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntity,           ipfixObservationPointPhysicalInterface,           ipfixObservationPointPhysicalEntityDirection,           ipfixSelectionProcessSelectorFunction       }       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The main objects for Exporters."       ::= { ipfixGroups 3 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 55]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   ipfixExporterStatsGroup OBJECT-GROUP       OBJECTS {           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheActiveFlows,           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheUnusedCacheEntries,           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheDataRecords,           ipfixMeteringProcessCacheDiscontinuityTime,           ipfixSelectionProcessStatsPacketsObserved,           ipfixSelectionProcessStatsPacketsDropped,           ipfixSelectionProcessStatsDiscontinuityTime       }       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The statistical objects for Exporters."       ::= { ipfixGroups 4 }   END8.2.  IPFIX SELECTOR MIB Definition   IPFIX-SELECTOR-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN   IMPORTS       MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE, mib-2           FROM SNMPv2-SMI                                --RFC2578       TruthValue           FROM SNMPv2-TC                                 --RFC2579       MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP           FROM SNMPv2-CONF;                              --RFC2580   ipfixSelectorMIB MODULE-IDENTITY       LAST-UPDATED "201003150000Z"         -- 15 March 2010       ORGANIZATION "IETF IPFIX Working Group"       CONTACT-INFO           "WG charter:http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/ipfix-charter.html           Mailing Lists:             General Discussion: ipfix@ietf.org             To Subscribe:http://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ipfix             Archive:http://www1.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/ipfix/current/index.htmlDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 56]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010           Editor:             Thomas Dietz             NEC Europe Ltd.             NEC Laboratories Europe             Network Research Division             Kurfuersten-Anlage 36             69115 Heidelberg             Germany             Phone: +49 6221 4342-128             Email: Thomas.Dietz@nw.neclab.eu             Atsushi Kobayashi             NTT Information Sharing Platform Laboratories             3-9-11 Midori-cho             Musashino-shi             180-8585             Japan             Phone: +81-422-59-3978             Email: akoba@nttv6.net             Benoit Claise             Cisco Systems, Inc.             De Kleetlaan 6a b1             Degem 1831             Belgium             Phone:  +32 2 704 5622             Email: bclaise@cisco.com             Gerhard Muenz             Technische Universitaet Muenchen             Department of Informatics             Chair for Network Architectures and Services (I8)             Boltzmannstr. 3             85748 Garching             Germany             Phone: +49 89 289-18008             Email: muenz@net.in.tum.de             URI:http://www.net.in.tum.de/~muenz"       DESCRIPTION           "The IPFIX SELECTOR MIB module defines the standard           filtering and sampling functions that can be referenced in           the ipfixSelectorTable of the IPFIX MIB.  The subtree           ipfixSelectorFunctions is a placeholder where all standard           filtering and sampling functions should be located.           The IPFIX SELECTOR MIB module is maintained by IANA and can           be extended through Expert Review [RFC5226], i.e., review by           one of a group of experts designated by an IETF AreaDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 57]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010           Director.  The group of experts MUST check the requested MIB           objects for completeness and accuracy of the description.           Requests for MIB objects that duplicate the functionality of           existing objects SHOULD be declined.  The smallest available           OID SHOULD be assigned to a new MIB objects.  The           specification of new MIB objects SHOULD follow the structure           specified inRFC 5815 and MUST be published using a           well-established and persistent publication medium.  The           experts will initially be drawn from the Working Group           Chairs and document editors of the IPFIX and PSAMP Working           Groups.           Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as           authors of the code. All rights reserved.           Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or           without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject           to the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD           License set forth inSection 4.c of the IETF Trust's           Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents           (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info)."   --  Revision history       REVISION     "201003150000Z"         -- 15 March 2010       DESCRIPTION           "Initial version, published asRFC 5815."       ::= { mib-2 194 }   --******************************************************************   -- Top Level Structure of the MIB   --******************************************************************   ipfixSelectorObjects     OBJECT IDENTIFIER       ::= { ipfixSelectorMIB 1 }   ipfixSelectorConformance OBJECT IDENTIFIER       ::= { ipfixSelectorMIB 2 }   --==================================================================   -- 1: Objects used by all IPFIX implementations   --==================================================================   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.1: Packet Selector Functions for IPFIX   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixSelectorFunctions OBJECT IDENTIFIER       ::= { ipfixSelectorObjects 1 }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 58]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 1.1.1: Function 1: Selecting All Packets   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixFuncSelectAll OBJECT IDENTIFIER       ::= { ipfixSelectorFunctions 1 }   ipfixFuncSelectAllAvail OBJECT-TYPE       SYNTAX      TruthValue       MAX-ACCESS  read-only       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "This object indicates the availability of the trivial           function of selecting all packets.  This function is always           available."       ::= { ipfixFuncSelectAll 1 }   --==================================================================   -- 2: Conformance Information   --==================================================================   ipfixSelectorCompliances OBJECT IDENTIFIER       ::= { ipfixSelectorConformance 1 }   ipfixSelectorGroups      OBJECT IDENTIFIER       ::= { ipfixSelectorConformance 2 }   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 2.1: Compliance Statements   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixSelectorBasicCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE       STATUS  current       DESCRIPTION           "An implementation that builds an IPFIX Exporter that           complies to this module MUST implement the objects defined           in the mandatory group ipfixBasicGroup.  The implementation           of all other objects depends on the implementation of the           corresponding functionality in the equipment."       MODULE  -- this module       MANDATORY-GROUPS {               ipfixSelectorBasicGroup       }       ::= { ipfixSelectorCompliances 1 }   --------------------------------------------------------------------   -- 2.2: MIB Grouping   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ipfixSelectorBasicGroup OBJECT-GROUP       OBJECTS {           ipfixFuncSelectAllAvail       }Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 59]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010       STATUS      current       DESCRIPTION           "The main IPFIX objects."       ::= { ipfixSelectorGroups 1 }   END9.  Security Considerations   There are no management objects defined in this MIB module that have   a MAX-ACCESS clause of read-write and/or read-create.  So, if these   MIB modules are implemented correctly, then there is no risk that an   intruder can alter or create any management objects of these MIB   modules via direct SNMP SET operations.   Some of the readable objects in these MIB modules (i.e., objects with   a MAX-ACCESS other than not-accessible) may be considered sensitive   or vulnerable in some network environments.  It is thus important to   control even GET and/or NOTIFY access to these objects and possibly   to even encrypt the values of these objects when sending them over   the network via SNMP.  These are the tables and objects and their   sensitivity/vulnerability:   o  ipfixTransportSessionTable - contains configuration data that      might be sensitive because objects in this table may reveal      information about the network infrastructure   o  ipfixExportTable - contains configuration data that might be      sensitive because object in this table may reveal information      about the network infrastructure as well   o  ipfixMeteringProcessTable - contains configuration data that might      be sensitive because objects in this table may reveal information      about the IPFIX Device itself   o  ipfixObservationPointTable - contains configuration data that      might be sensitive because objects in this table may reveal      information about the IPFIX Device itself and the network      infrastructure   o  ipfixSelectorFunctions - currently contains no sensitive data but      might want to be secured anyway since it may contain sensitive      data in a future version   All other objects and tables contain no data that is considered   sensitive.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 60]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010   SNMP versions prior to SNMPv3 did not include adequate security.   Even if the network itself is secure (for example by using IPsec),   even then, there is no control as to who on the secure network is   allowed to access and GET/SET (read/change/create/delete) the objects   in these MIB modules.   It is RECOMMENDED that implementers consider the security features as   provided by the SNMPv3 framework (see[RFC3410] Section 8), including   full support for the SNMPv3 cryptographic mechanisms (for   authentication and privacy).   Further, deployment of SNMP versions prior to SNMPv3 is NOT   RECOMMENDED.  Instead, it is RECOMMENDED to deploy SNMPv3 and to   enable cryptographic security.  It is then a customer/operator   responsibility to ensure that the SNMP entity giving access to an   instance of these MIB modules is properly configured to give access   to the objects only to those principals (users) that have legitimate   rights to indeed GET or SET (change/create/delete) them.10.  IANA Considerations   The MIB module in this document uses the following IANA-assigned   OBJECT IDENTIFIER values recorded in the SMI Numbers registry:           Descriptor        OBJECT IDENTIFIER value           ----------        -----------------------           ipfixMIB          { mib-2 193 }           ipfixSelectorMIB  { mib-2 194 }   Further on, the whole IPFIX SELECTOR MIB module is maintained by   IANA.  Additions to this MIB module are subject to Expert Review   [RFC5226], i.e., review by one of a group of experts designated by an   IETF Area Director.  The group of experts MUST check the requested   MIB objects for completeness and accuracy of the description.   Requests for MIB objects that duplicate the functionality of existing   objects SHOULD be declined.  The smallest available OID SHOULD be   assigned to new MIB objects.  The specification of new MIB objects   SHOULD follow the structure specified inSection 6 and MUST be   published using a well-established and persistent publication medium.   The experts will initially be drawn from the Working Group Chairs and   document editors of the IPFIX and PSAMP Working Groups.11.  Acknowledgments   This document is a product of the IPFIX Working Group.  The authors   would like to thank the following persons: Paul Aitken for his   detailed review, Dan Romascanu and the MIB doctors, and many more,   for the technical reviews and feedback.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 61]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 201012.  References12.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC2578]  McCloghrie, K., Ed., Perkins, D., Ed., and J.              Schoenwaelder, Ed., "Structure of Management Information              Version 2 (SMIv2)", STD 58,RFC 2578, April 1999.   [RFC2579]  McCloghrie, K., Ed., Perkins, D., Ed., and J.              Schoenwaelder, Ed., "Textual Conventions for SMIv2",              STD 58,RFC 2579, April 1999.   [RFC2580]  McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., and J. Schoenwaelder,              "Conformance Statements for SMIv2", STD 58,RFC 2580,              April 1999.   [RFC4001]  Daniele, M., Haberman, B., Routhier, S., and J.              Schoenwaelder, "Textual Conventions for Internet Network              Addresses",RFC 4001, February 2005.   [RFC2863]  McCloghrie, K. and F. Kastenholz, "The Interfaces Group              MIB",RFC 2863, June 2000.   [RFC3873]  Pastor, J. and M. Belinchon, "Stream Control Transmission              Protocol (SCTP) Management Information Base (MIB)",RFC 3873, September 2004.   [RFC4133]  Bierman, A. and K. McCloghrie, "Entity MIB (Version 3)",RFC 4133, August 2005.   [RFC5101]  Claise, B., "Specification of the IP Flow Information              Export (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic              Flow Information",RFC 5101, January 2008.   [RFC5102]  Quittek, J., Bryant, S., Claise, B., Aitken, P., and J.              Meyer, "Information Model for IP Flow Information Export",RFC 5102, January 2008.   [RFC5226]  Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an              IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 5226,              May 2008.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 62]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 201012.2.  Informative References   [RFC3410]  Case, J., Mundy, R., Partain, D., and B. Stewart,              "Introduction and Applicability Statements for Internet-              Standard Management Framework",RFC 3410, December 2002.   [RFC3917]  Quittek, J., Zseby, T., Claise, B., and S. Zander,              "Requirements for IP Flow Information Export (IPFIX)",RFC 3917, October 2004.   [RFC5470]  Sadasivan, G., Brownlee, N., Claise, B., and J. Quittek,              "Architecture for IP Flow Information Export",RFC 5470,              March 2009.   [RFC5472]  Zseby, T., Boschi, E., Brownlee, N., and B. Claise, "IP              Flow Information Export (IPFIX) Applicability",RFC 5472,              March 2009.   [RFC5474]  Duffield, N., Chiou, D., Claise, B., Greenberg, A.,              Grossglauser, M., and J. Rexford, "A Framework for Packet              Selection and Reporting",RFC 5474, March 2009.   [RFC5475]  Zseby, T., Molina, M., Duffield, N., Niccolini, S., and F.              Raspall, "Sampling and Filtering Techniques for IP Packet              Selection",RFC 5475, March 2009.   [RFC5476]  Claise, B., Johnson, A., and J. Quittek, "Packet Sampling              (PSAMP) Protocol Specifications",RFC 5476, March 2009.Dietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 63]

RFC 5815                        IPFIX MIB                     April 2010Authors' Addresses   Thomas Dietz (editor)   NEC Europe, Ltd.   NEC Laboratories Europe   Network Research Division   Kurfuersten-Anlage 36   Heidelberg  69115   DE   Phone: +49 6221 4342-128   EMail: Thomas.Dietz@nw.neclab.eu   Atsushi Kobayashi   NTT Information Sharing Platform Laboratories   3-9-11 Midori-cho   Musashino-shi, Tokyo  180-8585   JA   Phone: +81-422-59-3978   EMail: akoba@nttv6.net   Benoit Claise   Cisco Systems, Inc.   De Kleetlaan 6a b1   Degem  1831   BE   Phone: +32 2 704 5622   EMail: bclaise@cisco.com   Gerhard Muenz   Technische Universitaet Muenchen   Department of Informatics   Chair for Network Architectures and Services (I8)   Boltzmannstr. 3   Garching  85748   DE   Phone: +49 89 289-18008   EMail: muenz@net.in.tum.de   URI:http://www.net.in.tum.de/~muenzDietz, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 64]

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