RFC 3593 (rfc3593) - Page 2 of 10
Textual Conventions for MIB Modules Using Performance History Based on 15 Minute Intervals
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 3593 15 Minute Based Performance History TCs September 2003
1. Introduction
In cases where a manager must obtain performance history data about
the behavior of equipment it manages, several strategies can be
followed in the design of a MIB that represents the managed
equipment, including:
0 The agent counts events on a continuous basis and, whenever
desired, the manager obtains the value of the event counter and
adjusts its understanding of the history of events at the agent.
0 The agent allocates events to 'buckets' where each bucket
represents an interval of time.
Telecommunications equipment often makes use of the latter strategy.
See [3][4][5][7][8] for examples. In particular, for this equipment
it is common that history data is maintained by the agent in terms of
fifteen minute intervals.
This memo does not attempt to compare the relative merits of
different strategies used to obtain history data. Differences may
include polling policy, the amount of management traffic between
manager and agent, agent simplicity, and 'data currentness' of the
data obtained by the manager. MIB designers should consider these
aspects when choosing a particular strategy in a MIB design.
Instead, this memo provides definitions that can be used in MIB
modules that require history data based on fifteen minute intervals.
When designing a MIB module, it is often useful to define new types
similar to those defined in the SMI [2]. In comparison to a type
defined in the SMI, each of these new types has a different name, a
similar syntax, but more precise semantics. These newly defined
types are termed textual conventions, and are used for the
convenience of humans reading the MIB module. This is done through
Textual Conventions as defined in RFC 2579 [1]. It is the purpose of
this document to define the set of textual conventions to be used
when performance history based on 15 minute intervals is kept. The
performance history textual conventions defined in this memo are
based on 32 bit counts. For high capacity performance history counts
see [9].
2. Note on Invalid Data and Proxies
In this document, the word proxy indicates an application which
receives SNMP messages and replies to them on behalf of the devices
where the actual implementation resides, e.g., DS3/E3 interfaces.
The proxy will have already collected the information about the
DS3/E3 interfaces into its local database and may not necessarily
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