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diff --git a/data/mibs/INET-ADDRESS-MIB.txt b/data/mibs/INET-ADDRESS-MIB.txt deleted file mode 100644 index a778cba6b..000000000 --- a/data/mibs/INET-ADDRESS-MIB.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,402 +0,0 @@ -INET-ADDRESS-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN - -IMPORTS - MODULE-IDENTITY, mib-2, Unsigned32 FROM SNMPv2-SMI - TEXTUAL-CONVENTION FROM SNMPv2-TC; - -inetAddressMIB MODULE-IDENTITY - LAST-UPDATED "200502040000Z" - ORGANIZATION - "IETF Operations and Management Area" - CONTACT-INFO - "Juergen Schoenwaelder (Editor) - International University Bremen - P.O. Box 750 561 - 28725 Bremen, Germany - - Phone: +49 421 200-3587 - EMail: j.schoenwaelder@iu-bremen.de - - Send comments to <ietfmibs@ops.ietf.org>." - DESCRIPTION - "This MIB module defines textual conventions for - representing Internet addresses. An Internet - address can be an IPv4 address, an IPv6 address, - or a DNS domain name. This module also defines - textual conventions for Internet port numbers, - autonomous system numbers, and the length of an - Internet address prefix. - - Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005). This version - of this MIB module is part of RFC 4001, see the RFC - itself for full legal notices." - REVISION "200502040000Z" - DESCRIPTION - "Third version, published as RFC 4001. This revision - introduces the InetZoneIndex, InetScopeType, and - InetVersion textual conventions." - REVISION "200205090000Z" - DESCRIPTION - "Second version, published as RFC 3291. This - revision contains several clarifications and - introduces several new textual conventions: - InetAddressPrefixLength, InetPortNumber, - InetAutonomousSystemNumber, InetAddressIPv4z, - and InetAddressIPv6z." - REVISION "200006080000Z" - DESCRIPTION - "Initial version, published as RFC 2851." - ::= { mib-2 76 } - -InetAddressType ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "A value that represents a type of Internet address. - - unknown(0) An unknown address type. This value MUST - be used if the value of the corresponding - InetAddress object is a zero-length string. - It may also be used to indicate an IP address - that is not in one of the formats defined - below. - - ipv4(1) An IPv4 address as defined by the - InetAddressIPv4 textual convention. - - ipv6(2) An IPv6 address as defined by the - InetAddressIPv6 textual convention. - - ipv4z(3) A non-global IPv4 address including a zone - index as defined by the InetAddressIPv4z - textual convention. - - ipv6z(4) A non-global IPv6 address including a zone - index as defined by the InetAddressIPv6z - textual convention. - - dns(16) A DNS domain name as defined by the - InetAddressDNS textual convention. - - Each definition of a concrete InetAddressType value must be - accompanied by a definition of a textual convention for use - with that InetAddressType. - - To support future extensions, the InetAddressType textual - convention SHOULD NOT be sub-typed in object type definitions. - It MAY be sub-typed in compliance statements in order to - require only a subset of these address types for a compliant - implementation. - - Implementations must ensure that InetAddressType objects - and any dependent objects (e.g., InetAddress objects) are - consistent. An inconsistentValue error must be generated - if an attempt to change an InetAddressType object would, - for example, lead to an undefined InetAddress value. In - - particular, InetAddressType/InetAddress pairs must be - changed together if the address type changes (e.g., from - ipv6(2) to ipv4(1))." - SYNTAX INTEGER { - unknown(0), - ipv4(1), - ipv6(2), - ipv4z(3), - ipv6z(4), - dns(16) - } - -InetAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "Denotes a generic Internet address. - - An InetAddress value is always interpreted within the context - of an InetAddressType value. Every usage of the InetAddress - textual convention is required to specify the InetAddressType - object that provides the context. It is suggested that the - InetAddressType object be logically registered before the - object(s) that use the InetAddress textual convention, if - they appear in the same logical row. - - The value of an InetAddress object must always be - consistent with the value of the associated InetAddressType - object. Attempts to set an InetAddress object to a value - inconsistent with the associated InetAddressType - must fail with an inconsistentValue error. - - When this textual convention is used as the syntax of an - index object, there may be issues with the limit of 128 - sub-identifiers specified in SMIv2, STD 58. In this case, - the object definition MUST include a 'SIZE' clause to - limit the number of potential instance sub-identifiers; - otherwise the applicable constraints MUST be stated in - the appropriate conceptual row DESCRIPTION clauses, or - in the surrounding documentation if there is no single - DESCRIPTION clause that is appropriate." - SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (0..255)) - -InetAddressIPv4 ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - DISPLAY-HINT "1d.1d.1d.1d" - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "Represents an IPv4 network address: - - Octets Contents Encoding - 1-4 IPv4 address network-byte order - - The corresponding InetAddressType value is ipv4(1). - - This textual convention SHOULD NOT be used directly in object - definitions, as it restricts addresses to a specific format. - However, if it is used, it MAY be used either on its own or in - conjunction with InetAddressType, as a pair." - SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (4)) - -InetAddressIPv6 ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - DISPLAY-HINT "2x:2x:2x:2x:2x:2x:2x:2x" - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "Represents an IPv6 network address: - - Octets Contents Encoding - 1-16 IPv6 address network-byte order - - The corresponding InetAddressType value is ipv6(2). - - This textual convention SHOULD NOT be used directly in object - definitions, as it restricts addresses to a specific format. - However, if it is used, it MAY be used either on its own or in - conjunction with InetAddressType, as a pair." - SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (16)) - -InetAddressIPv4z ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - DISPLAY-HINT "1d.1d.1d.1d%4d" - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "Represents a non-global IPv4 network address, together - with its zone index: - - Octets Contents Encoding - 1-4 IPv4 address network-byte order - 5-8 zone index network-byte order - - The corresponding InetAddressType value is ipv4z(3). - - The zone index (bytes 5-8) is used to disambiguate identical - address values on nodes that have interfaces attached to - different zones of the same scope. The zone index may contain - the special value 0, which refers to the default zone for each - scope. - - This textual convention SHOULD NOT be used directly in object - - definitions, as it restricts addresses to a specific format. - However, if it is used, it MAY be used either on its own or in - conjunction with InetAddressType, as a pair." - SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (8)) - -InetAddressIPv6z ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - DISPLAY-HINT "2x:2x:2x:2x:2x:2x:2x:2x%4d" - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "Represents a non-global IPv6 network address, together - with its zone index: - - Octets Contents Encoding - 1-16 IPv6 address network-byte order - 17-20 zone index network-byte order - - The corresponding InetAddressType value is ipv6z(4). - - The zone index (bytes 17-20) is used to disambiguate - identical address values on nodes that have interfaces - attached to different zones of the same scope. The zone index - may contain the special value 0, which refers to the default - zone for each scope. - - This textual convention SHOULD NOT be used directly in object - definitions, as it restricts addresses to a specific format. - However, if it is used, it MAY be used either on its own or in - conjunction with InetAddressType, as a pair." - SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (20)) - -InetAddressDNS ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - DISPLAY-HINT "255a" - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "Represents a DNS domain name. The name SHOULD be fully - qualified whenever possible. - - The corresponding InetAddressType is dns(16). - - The DESCRIPTION clause of InetAddress objects that may have - InetAddressDNS values MUST fully describe how (and when) - these names are to be resolved to IP addresses. - - The resolution of an InetAddressDNS value may require to - query multiple DNS records (e.g., A for IPv4 and AAAA for - IPv6). The order of the resolution process and which DNS - record takes precedence depends on the configuration of the - resolver. - - This textual convention SHOULD NOT be used directly in object - definitions, as it restricts addresses to a specific format. - However, if it is used, it MAY be used either on its own or in - conjunction with InetAddressType, as a pair." - SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (1..255)) - -InetAddressPrefixLength ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - DISPLAY-HINT "d" - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "Denotes the length of a generic Internet network address - prefix. A value of n corresponds to an IP address mask - that has n contiguous 1-bits from the most significant - bit (MSB), with all other bits set to 0. - - An InetAddressPrefixLength value is always interpreted within - the context of an InetAddressType value. Every usage of the - InetAddressPrefixLength textual convention is required to - specify the InetAddressType object that provides the - context. It is suggested that the InetAddressType object be - logically registered before the object(s) that use the - InetAddressPrefixLength textual convention, if they appear - in the same logical row. - - InetAddressPrefixLength values larger than - the maximum length of an IP address for a specific - InetAddressType are treated as the maximum significant - value applicable for the InetAddressType. The maximum - significant value is 32 for the InetAddressType - 'ipv4(1)' and 'ipv4z(3)' and 128 for the InetAddressType - 'ipv6(2)' and 'ipv6z(4)'. The maximum significant value - for the InetAddressType 'dns(16)' is 0. - - The value zero is object-specific and must be defined as - part of the description of any object that uses this - syntax. Examples of the usage of zero might include - situations where the Internet network address prefix - is unknown or does not apply. - - The upper bound of the prefix length has been chosen to - be consistent with the maximum size of an InetAddress." - SYNTAX Unsigned32 (0..2040) - -InetPortNumber ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - DISPLAY-HINT "d" - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "Represents a 16 bit port number of an Internet transport - - layer protocol. Port numbers are assigned by IANA. A - current list of all assignments is available from - <http://www.iana.org/>. - - The value zero is object-specific and must be defined as - part of the description of any object that uses this - syntax. Examples of the usage of zero might include - situations where a port number is unknown, or when the - value zero is used as a wildcard in a filter." - REFERENCE "STD 6 (RFC 768), STD 7 (RFC 793) and RFC 2960" - SYNTAX Unsigned32 (0..65535) - -InetAutonomousSystemNumber ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - DISPLAY-HINT "d" - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "Represents an autonomous system number that identifies an - Autonomous System (AS). An AS is a set of routers under a - single technical administration, using an interior gateway - protocol and common metrics to route packets within the AS, - and using an exterior gateway protocol to route packets to - other ASes'. IANA maintains the AS number space and has - delegated large parts to the regional registries. - - Autonomous system numbers are currently limited to 16 bits - (0..65535). There is, however, work in progress to enlarge the - autonomous system number space to 32 bits. Therefore, this - textual convention uses an Unsigned32 value without a - range restriction in order to support a larger autonomous - system number space." - REFERENCE "RFC 1771, RFC 1930" - SYNTAX Unsigned32 - -InetScopeType ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "Represents a scope type. This textual convention can be used - in cases where a MIB has to represent different scope types - and there is no context information, such as an InetAddress - object, that implicitly defines the scope type. - - Note that not all possible values have been assigned yet, but - they may be assigned in future revisions of this specification. - Applications should therefore be able to deal with values - not yet assigned." - REFERENCE "RFC 3513" - SYNTAX INTEGER { - -- reserved(0), - interfaceLocal(1), - linkLocal(2), - subnetLocal(3), - adminLocal(4), - siteLocal(5), -- site-local unicast addresses - -- have been deprecated by RFC 3879 - -- unassigned(6), - -- unassigned(7), - organizationLocal(8), - -- unassigned(9), - -- unassigned(10), - -- unassigned(11), - -- unassigned(12), - -- unassigned(13), - global(14) - -- reserved(15) - } - -InetZoneIndex ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - DISPLAY-HINT "d" - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "A zone index identifies an instance of a zone of a - specific scope. - - The zone index MUST disambiguate identical address - values. For link-local addresses, the zone index will - typically be the interface index (ifIndex as defined in the - IF-MIB) of the interface on which the address is configured. - - The zone index may contain the special value 0, which refers - to the default zone. The default zone may be used in cases - where the valid zone index is not known (e.g., when a - management application has to write a link-local IPv6 - address without knowing the interface index value). The - default zone SHOULD NOT be used as an easy way out in - cases where the zone index for a non-global IPv6 address - is known." - REFERENCE "RFC4007" - SYNTAX Unsigned32 - -InetVersion ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION - STATUS current - DESCRIPTION - "A value representing a version of the IP protocol. - - unknown(0) An unknown or unspecified version of the IP - protocol. - - ipv4(1) The IPv4 protocol as defined in RFC 791 (STD 5). - - ipv6(2) The IPv6 protocol as defined in RFC 2460. - - Note that this textual convention SHOULD NOT be used to - distinguish different address types associated with IP - protocols. The InetAddressType has been designed for this - purpose." - REFERENCE "RFC 791, RFC 2460" - SYNTAX INTEGER { - unknown(0), - ipv4(1), - ipv6(2) - } -END |