RFC 1512 (rfc1512) - Page 3 of 51
FDDI Management Information Base
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 1512 FDDI MIB September 1993
MIB-II [4] has the OBJECT IDENTIFIER value:
fddimib OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { fddi 73 }
The definitions of the objects presented here draws heavily from
related work in the ANSI X3T9.5 committee and the SMT subcommittee of
that committee [8]. In fact, the definitions of the managed objects
in this document are, to the maximum extent possible, identical to
those identified by the ANSI committee. The semantics of each
managed object should be the same with syntactic changes made as
necessary to recast the objects in terms of the Internet-standard SMI
and MIB so as to be compatible with the SNMP. Examples of these
syntactic changes include remapping booleans to enumerated integers,
remapping bit strings to octet strings, and the like. In addition,
the naming of the objects was changed to achieve compatibility.
These minimal syntactic changes with no semantic changes should allow
implementations of SNMP manageable FDDI systems to share
instrumentation with other network management schemes and thereby
minimize implementation cost. In addition, the translation of
information conveyed by managed objects from one network management
scheme to another is eased by these shared definitions.
Only the essential variables, as indicated by their mandatory status
in the ANSI specification, were retained in this document. The
importance of variables which have an optional status in the ANSI
specification were perceived as being less widely accepted.
2.1. Textual Conventions
Several new datatypes are introduced as a textual convention in this
MIB document. These textual conventions enhance the readability of
the document and ease comparisons with its ANSI counterpart. It
should be noted that the introduction of these textual conventions
has no effect on either the syntax or the semantics of any managed
objects. The use of these is merely an artifact of the explanatory
method used. Objects defined in terms of one of these methods are
always encoded by means of the rules that define the primitive type.
Hence, no changes to the SMI or the SNMP are necessary to accommodate
these textual conventions which are adopted merely for the
convenience of readers and writers in pursuit of the elusive goal of
clear, concise, and unambiguous MIB documents.
3. Changes from RFC 1285
The changes from RFC 1285 [2] to this document, based on changes from
ANSI SMT 6.2 to SMT 7.3, were so numerous that the objects in this
MIB module are located on a different branch of the MIB tree. No
Case & Rijsinghani