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rfc:rfc1052

Network Working Group V. Cerf Request for Comments: 1052 NRI

                                                            April 1988
             IAB Recommendations for the Development of
               Internet Network Management Standards

Status of this Memo

 This memo is intended to convey to the Internet community and other
 interested parties the recommendations of the Internet Activities
 Board (IAB) for the development of network management protocols for
 use in the TCP/IP environment.  The memo does NOT, in and of itself,
 define or propose an Official Internet Protocol.  It does reflect,
 however, the policy of the IAB with respect to further network
 management development in the short and the long term.  Distribution
 of this memo is unlimited.

Background

 At the IAB meeting on 21 March 88 in videoconference, the report of
 the Ad Hoc Network Management Review Committee was reviewed.  The
 recommendations of the committee were endorsed by the IAB and
 direction given to the chairman of the Internet Engineering Task
 Force to take the necessary steps to implement the recommendations.
 The IAB expressed its gratitude for the efforts of the HEMS, SNMP and
 CMIP/CMIS working groups and urged that parties with technical
 interest in the outcome of the network management working groups
 convey their ideas and issues to the relevant working group chairmen.
 The IETF chairman was directed to form two new working groups, one of
 which would be responsible for the further specification and
 definition of elements to be included in the Management Information
 Base (MIB).  The other would be responsible for defining extensions
 to the Simple Network Management Protocol to accommodate the short-
 term needs of the network vendor and operator communities.  The
 longer-term needs of the Internet community are to be met using the
 ISO CMIS/CMIP framework as a basis.  A working group of the IETF
 exists for this work and would continue its work, coordinating with
 the two new groups and reporting to the IETF chairman for guidance.
 The output of the MIB working group is to be provided to both the
 SNMP working group and the CMIS/CMIP ["Netman"] working group so as
 to assure compatibility of monitored items for both network
 management frameworks.

Cerf [Page 1] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

Specific Recommendations

 The IAB recommends that the Simple Network Management Protocol be
 adopted as the BASIS for network management in the short-term.
 Extensions may be required to the existing SNMP specification to
 accommodate additional data types or to deal with functional or
 performance issues arising as multiple SNMP implementations are
 deployed and applied, especially in multi-vendor applications.
 The SNMP working group constituted by the IETF is charged with
 considering requirements not met by the present SNMP definition,
 defining extensions, if necessary, to accommodate these needs, and
 preparing revisions of the SNMP specifications to address any new
 extensions.
 The IAB urges the working group to be extremely sensitive to the need
 to keep SNMP simple, to work quickly to come to concensus on any
 revisions needed and to promulgate expeditiously the results of its
 work in one or more RFCs within the next 90 days.  The IETF chairman
 is responsible for resolving disagreements arising if they cannot be
 resolved within the working group and is instructed to escalate
 problems quickly to the IAB should resolution not be forthcoming.
 The IAB further recommends that the MIB working group begin its work
 equally expeditiously, taking as its starting inputs the MIB
 definitions found in the existing High-Level Entity Management
 Systems (HEMS) RFC-1024, the SNMP IDEA-11, and CMIS/CMIP IDEAs.
 It is the intention of the IAB that the MIB definitions be applied
 both to the SNMP system in the short term and CMIS/CMIP for TCP/IP in
 the longer term.  The three working groups will have to coordinate
 their efforts carefully to achieve these objectives:
         1. Rapid convergence and definition for SNMP.
         2. Rapid convergence and definition for the TCP/IP MIB.
         3. Provision for transitioning from SNMP to CMIP/CMIS.
         4. Early demonstration of the CMIP/CMIS capability using the
            TCP/IP MIB.
 The IAB remains extremely interested in progress towards these goals
 and intends to have representation, whenever possible, in the various
 working group and IETF plenary activities.

Cerf [Page 2] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

       REPORT OF THE AD HOC NETWORK MANAGEMENT REVIEW COMMITTEE
                    Edited by Vinton Cerf, Chairman
                              March 1988

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

 On 29 February 88, an ad hoc committee was convened to review the
 network management options for the Internet in particular and the
 TCP/IP protocol suite in general.  This meeting was called at the
 request of the Internet Activities Board in the course of exercising
 its responsibilities to the Federal Research Internet Coordinating
 Council (FRICC) and by the MITRE Corporation as a consequence of its
 work for the U.S. Air Force on the ULANA project.
 At the conclusion of the one day meeting, it was agreed that the
 following recommendations be forwarded to the Internet Activities
 Board chairman, Dr. David C. Clark, for consideration at the next IAB
 meeting scheduled for 21 March:
    1. In the short term, the Internet community should adopt and
    adapt the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) for use as the
    basis of common network management throughout the system.
    (Rationale:  The software is available and in operation.)
    2. In the longer term, the Internet research community and the
    vendors should develop, deploy and test a network management
    system based on the International Standards Organization (ISO)
    Common Management Information Services/Common Management
    Information Protocol (CMIS/CMIP).
    (Rationale: The Internet community can take the high ground in
    protocol development by virtue of the experimental environment in
    which it can operate.  Recommendations to the ISO from this
    community, the IAB and the vendors will carry great weight if they
    are in the language of the ISO common network management system
    and if they are rooted in actual experience with implementation
    and use in the field.)
    3. Responsibility for the SNMP effort should be placed in the
    hands of an IETF task force.
    (Rationale:  Eliminate vendor-specific bias or control over the
    SNMP and its evolution and harmonize inputs from the Internet
    community.)

Cerf [Page 3] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

    4. As a high priority effort, define an extended Management
    Information Base (MIB) for SNMP and TCP/IP CMIP to bring them into
    closer conformance with the MIB defined for the experimental
    HighLevel Entity Management System (HEMS).
    (Rationale:  The HEMS effort produced a very thorough and widely-
    discussed set of elements to monitor, along with definitions of
    the semantics of these elements.  The current SNMP definitions are
    more restricted and the CMIP definitions less precise.
    Implementation of SNMP in a timely and useful fashion through the
    Internet cannot be satisfactorily completed without such a
    definition of information elements in hand.)
    The ad hoc committee therefore recommends immediate action by the
    IAB on all four of these points.  It should be noted that this
    resolution would not have been possible in such a timely way
    without the statesman-like efforts of Craig Partridge who, at the
    end of the day, recommended that the HEMS effort be withdrawn from
    consideration so as to pave the way for an Internet-wide
    agreement.  In consideration of this unselfish act, the ad hoc
    committee urges the IAB to approve the recommendations above and
    to instruct the IETF to move quickly to accept and act on the SNMP
    items requiring completion.

1. INTRODUCTION

 During its development history, the community of researchers,
 developers, implementors and users of the DARPA/DoD TCP/IP protocol
 suite have experimented with a wide range of protocols in a variety
 of different networking environments.  The Internet has grown,
 especially in the last few years, as a result of the widespread
 availability of software and hardware supporting this system.  The
 scaling of the size and scope of the Internet and increased use of
 its technology in commercial applications has underscored for
 researchers, developers and vendors the need for a common network
 management framework within which TCP/IP products can be made to
 work.
 In recognition of this need, several efforts were started to develop
 network management concepts which might be applied to the Internet
 and to the internet technology in general.  Three of these efforts
 had made sufficient progress by the end of 1987 that it became clear
 that some choices had to be made or the community would find itself
 with a set of incompatible network management tools.  These efforts
 included the High-Level Entity Management System (HEMS), the Simple
 Gateway Monitoring Protocol (SGMP) and the Common Management
 Information Service/Protocol.

Cerf [Page 4] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

 The latter is an ISO initiative which was adapted to Internet use in
 a vendor-initiated effort.  The HEMS work was carried out in the
 context of the Gateway Monitoring group of the Internet Engineering
 Task Force.  The SGMP effort was carried out largely in the practical
 context of the NYSERNET and SURAnet regional networks which needed
 network management facilities to operate satisfactorily.
 Independent of the general Internet situation and requirements, the
 U.S.  Air Force has been pursuing a Universal Local Area Network
 Architecture (ULANA) for its own use. The principal agent for the
 development of the ULANA specifications is the MITRE Corporation.
 Faced with several long and short term network management options,
 the MITRE ULANA specification team initiated an effort with
 substantial vendor participation called the NETMAN working group.
 It was against this fabric of various options that the IAB appointed
 a chairman to convene a review committee to discuss these various
 options and to make recommendations on long and short term choices.
 The MITRE Corporation co-sponsored this work to further its aims in
 the specification of the ULANA design.
 Reference material listed at the end of this report was provided in
 advance of the meeting.

2. DISCUSSION

 Rather than attempting to produce minutes of the meeting, this
 section summarizes in very high level terms the substance of the
 discussion which took place during most of the meeting.  Presentation
 viewgraphs can be made available to IAB/FRICC members interested in
 their contents.
 The agenda was followed fairly closely with the technical
 presentations made in the order suggested: HEMS, SGMP, CMIP/CMIS.
 The HEMS effort has established a benchmark for other network
 management work in the sense that it took a comprehensive conceptual
 view of the problem and went into considerable detail on the design
 of the underlying management information database, the mechanics of
 access to and reporting of information, considerations of scaling and
 performance (e.g., Query Language vs Remote Procedure Call style),
 definition of information required and so on.  HEMS has been
 implemented in an experimental version from which some encouraging
 performance measurements were taken.  Serious vendor interest in this
 protocol was expressed by Cisco Systems and implementation efforts
 were under way as of the meeting.
 The SGMP effort, though somewhat less documented, was rooted in a

Cerf [Page 5] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

 practical need for network management tools for the NYSERNET,
 SURAnet, and, by extension, other components of the Internet.
 Implementations of it exist, in its RFC-1028 form (probably with some
 experimental extensions based on experience gained from the initial
 work), and are in use today.  Serious vendor support for this work is
 found at Proteon and, more recently, in the NSFNET effort by MERIT,
 IBM and MCI, specifically in the IBM Network Switching System (NSS)
 nodes.  Applications running above SGMP exist and provide useful
 monitoring information, presented in easily grasped form.
 The ISO CMIS/CMIP effort, voluminously documented, has had almost no
 implementation as yet.  Reports from Unisys/SDC about an experimental
 implementation were heard at the meeting.  There is substantial
 momentum in the international community for the adoption of this
 service and protocol suite for network management.  The Draft
 Proposal is out for its second ballot (it failed to make Draft
 International Standard on its first ballot).  There is vocal vendor
 support for this work, based on the premise that ultimately the ISO
 protocol suite will propagate and the vendors must support it.
 In general, all of the network management proposals make use of the
 Abstract Syntax Notation 1 (ASN.1) which has emerged from the ISO
 efforts as a kind of lingua franca for the representation of
 arbitrary data structures.  The data types used in the SGMP
 Management Information Base (aspects of network components to be
 monitored) are the most restricted of the three proposals, confined
 to integers and octet strings only.  HEMS has the most extensive
 Management Information Base and added some rather unique ideas such
 as self-knowledge about what could be monitored so that a
 device/unit/component could respond to a query asking "what can you
 tell me about yourself and your operation and how is it represented?"
 (!).  CMIS/CMIP is probably the broadest in scope, but less precisely
 defined at this point, with respect to information which should be
 monitored.  The draft RFCs referenced above relating to the CMIS/CMIP
 concerning items to be monitored are still in the definition stages.
 A point made strongly by the HEMS team was their concern that a
 Remote Operations basis for CMIP may not scale well into a very large
 Internet which needs to be monitored from a few central sites.
 Remote Operations is a term used by ISO and means, roughly, what the
 Internet community has long referred to as Remote Procedure Calls.
 If each atomic action is a Remote Procedure Call, the HEMS team
 argues that increasing Internet size and potential delays may vastly
 constrain the amount and timeliness of information which can be
 collected.  The HEMS design uses, instead, a general query language
 approach which permits more elaborate, multi-variable queries to be
 formulated at the requesting site and processed at the responding
 site(s).

Cerf [Page 6] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

 Although it does substantial injustice to the very lucid and helpful
 presentations by representatives of each of the network management
 research groups, I have chosen to leave out much of the detail from
 this report and move directly to the points of agreement which were
 reached by the Committee.

3. POINTS OF AGREEMENT

 (i) Future Internet development is a joint interest of the R&D
 community, the vendor community and the user community.
 [Editor's comment: The development of the Internet is now not only
 dependent on research work, but on the hardware and software of
 vendors selling to both commercial ("internet") and the research
 environment ("Internet").  Moreover, the Internet users are not all
 concerned with network research; many of the components of the
 Internet are based on vendor-supplied and supported subsystems.]
 (ii) We still don't have a common understanding of what
 [Inter]Network Management really is.
 [Editor's comment: We haven't tried to manage the Internet as a
 collection of autonomous systems in an effective way, yet.]
 (iii) We will learn what [Inter]Network Management is by doing it.
      (a) in as large a scale as is possible
      (b) with as much diversity of implementation as possible
      (c) over as wide a range of protocol layers as possible
      (d) with as much administrative diversity as we can stand.
 (iv) There are more than HEMS, SGMP and CMIS/CMIP as potential
 candidates:
      HEMS, SGMP, CMIS/CMIP [multiple profiles], NETVIEW,
      LANMANAGER, Network Computing Forum "Fat Document"...
 [Editor's comment: The multiplicity of options is motivation for
 coalescing the energy of the Internet environment around single short
 and long term foci so as to make more substantial progress in really
 understanding network management per point (iii).]
 (v) Define the Management Information Base for TCP/IP suite NOW!
 (vi) Seek a seat for IETF on ANSI, ISO and/or CCITT!!!

Cerf [Page 7] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

 [Editor's comment: This may actually be feasible.]
 (vii) Define a CMIS interface to any of the surviving network
 management schemes so as to provide a migration path to ISO.

4. RESOLUTION AND CONCLUSIONS

 In a dramatic act of statesmanship, Craig Partridge volunteered that
 the HEMS proposal be dropped in favor of the other two efforts, SGMP
 and CMIS/CMIP - IF THIS WOULD LEAD TO INTERNET-WIDE AGREEMENT ON A
 NETWORK MANAGEMENT PLAN FOR THE SHORT AND LONG TERM.
 A rationale for the long term was proposed, based on the assumption
 that the ISO initiatives, and the U.S. Government issuance of the
 GOSIP guidelines, would ultimately require at least the Government
 users, and hence their vendor suppliers, to use ISO-based protocols
 and tools. In this rationale, the Internet research community and its
 vendors would "take the high ground" in network management by
 implementing the CMIS/CMIP on top of the TCP/IP protocol suite and
 deploy it widely for experimental use in the Internet.
 Neither the ISO nor any other organization, including the Corporation
 for Open Systems (COS) has anything close to the laboratory in large
 that the Internet represents. By taking the initiative, the Internet
 working groups can establish credibility based on experience which
 will make it far more feasible to affect the evolution of the ISO
 network management and other related efforts. The Internet community
 will be able to speak with authority about problems with the design
 or definition of CMIS/CMIP based on real implementation experience
 and use, rather than solely analytic means.
 In the short term, however, the Internet desperately needs tools to
 apply to the operational management problems associated with its
 rapid growth. Given the present state of advanced implementation of
 the SGMP and its relative simplicity, the general agreement was that
 SGMP (or its re-named successor, SNMP) should be quickly brought to
 more complete specification for widespread implementation and use.
 In short, the ad hoc committee recommends:
    1. In the short term, the Internet community should adopt and
    adapt the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) for use as the
    basis of common network management throughout the system.
    (Rationale: The software is available and in operation.)
    2. In the longer term, the Internet research community and the
    vendors should develop, deploy and test a network management

Cerf [Page 8] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

    system based on the International Standards Organization (ISO)
    Common Management Information Services/Common Management
    Information Protocol (CMIS/CMIP).
    (Rationale: The Internet community can take the high ground in
    protocol development by virtue of the experimental environment in
    which it can operate.  Recommendations to the ISO from this
    community, the IAB and the vendors will carry great weight if they
    are in the language of the ISO common network management system
    and if they are rooted in actual experience with implementation
    and use in the field.)
    3. Responsibility for the SNMP effort should be placed in the
    hands of an IETF task force.
    (Rationale: Eliminate vendor-specific bias or control over the
    SNMP and its evolution and harmonize inputs from the Internet
    community.)
    4. As a high priority effort, define an extended Management
    Information Base (MIB) for SNMP and TCP/IP CMIP to bring them into
    closer conformance with the MIB defined for the experimental
    HighLevel Entity Management System (HEMS).           (Rationale:
    The HEMS effort produced a very thorough and widely-discussed set
    of elements to monitor, along with definitions of the semantics of
    these elements. The current SNMP definitions are more restricted
    and the CMIP definitions less precise. Implementation of SNMP in a
    timely and useful fashion through the Internet cannot be
    satisfactorily completed without such a definition of information
    elements in hand.)

Cerf [Page 9] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

MEMBERS OF THE AD HOC NET MANAGEMENT REVIEW COMMITTEE

 Amatzia Ben-Artzi
 Sytek Corp.
 1225 Charleston Rd.
 Mountain View, CA 94043
      Amatzia@amadeus.stanford.edu
 Bob Braden
 USC-ISI
 4676 Admiralty Way
 Marina del Rey, CA 90292
      braden@isi.edu
 Jeff Case
 University of Tennessee
 200 Stokely Management Center
 Knoxville, TN 37996
      case@utkcs2.cs.utk.edu
 Vint Cerf - Chairman
 Corp. for National Research Initiatives
 1895 Preston White Dr., Suite 100
 Reston, VA 22091
     (703) 620-8990
     Cerf@ISI.EDU
 Chuck Davin
 Proteon, Inc.
 2 Technology Dr.
 Westborough, MA 01536
     jrd@monk.proteon.com
 Stephen Dunford
 UNISYS Corp.
 System Development Corporation
 5151 Camino Road
 Camarillo, CA 93010
      dunford@cam.unisys.com
 Mark Fedor
 NYSERNET
 125 Jordan Road
 Troy, NY 12180
      fedor@nisc.nyser.net

Cerf [Page 10] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

 Phill Gross - IETF Chairman
 MITRE Corporation
 1820 Dolley Madison Blvd.
 McLean, VA 22012
      Gross@Gateway.MITRE.Org
 Lee LaBarre
 MITRE Corporation
 Burlington Road
 Bedford, MA 01730
      cel@mitre-bedford.arpa
 Dan Lynch
 Advanced Computing Environments
 480 San Antonio Rd.
 Mountain View, CA 94040
      Lynch@isi.edu
 Jim Mathis
 Apple Computer, Inc.
 MS 27-0
 20525 Mariani Ave.
 Cupertino, CA 95014
      Mathis@Apple.com
 Craig Partridge
 BBN Labs
 10 Moulton St.
 Cambridge, MA 02238
     craig@bbn.com
 Marshall T. Rose
 The Wollongong Group, Inc.
 1129 San Antonio Road
 Palo Alto, CA 94043
      MRose@twg.com
 Greg Satz
 Cisco Systems
 1360 Willow Rd., Suite 201
 Menlo Park, CA 94301
      satz@cisco.com
 Martin Lee Schoffstall
 NYSERNET
 125 Jordan Road
 Troy, NY 12180
      schoff@nisc.nyser.net

Cerf [Page 11] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

 Glenn Trewitt
 Center for Integrated Systems, Room 216
 Stanford University
 Stanford, CA 94305
      Trewitt@amadeus.stanford.edu

MEETING LOCATION: San Diego Supercomputer Center, UC San Diego

LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS: Paul Love, SDSC

MEETING DATE: 29 February 1988

AGENDA ITEMS:

 0900 Introductions and Objectives/Cerf
 0915 HEMS: Craig Partridge and Glenn Trewitt
 1030 Break
 1045 SGMP - Jeff Case
 1145 CMIP/CMIS - Amatzia Ben-Artzi
 1245 Lunch Break
 1430 TCP/IP and ISO: Politics, Technology, Penetration/Cerf
 1530 Break
 1545 Tradeoffs among alternate paths (Discussion)
 1700 Resolution of alternatives
 1730 Summary of conclusions/actions
 1800 Adjourn

Cerf [Page 12] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

REFERENCES

 The following reference material was provided in advance of the
 meeting.  Note that some of the citations include informal
 descriptors (such as IDEA numbers or DRAFT letter codes), for
 example, IDEA-13 or DRAFT-AAAA.  IDEA notes may be updated from time
 to time reusing the same number.  The IDEA notes are the working
 notes of the Engineering Task Force.  The DRAFT is a temporary
 notation and may not be meaningful for more than a few months.
 HEMS
    (1) Craig Partridge, "A UNIX Implementation of HEMS", USENIX,
    February 1988.  [Available from C. Partridge, BBN Labs]
    (2) Craig Partridge and Glenn Trewitt, "The High-Level Entity
    Management System", RFC-1021.
    (3) Craig Partridge and Glenn Trewitt, "The High-Level Entity
    Management Protocol", RFC-1022.
    (4) Glenn Trewitt and Craig Partridge, "The HEMS Monitoring and
    Control Language", RFC-1023.
    (5) Craig Partridge and Glenn Trewitt, "HEMS Variable
    Definitions", RFC-1024.
    (6) Craig Partridge and Glenn Trewitt, "The High-Level Entity
    Management System", IEEE Network magazine, March 1988.
 SGMP/SNMP
    (1) James Davin, Jeff Case, Mark Fedor and Martin Schoffstall, "A
    Simple Gateway Monitoring Protocol", RFC-1028, November 1987.
    (2) James Davin, Jeff Case, Mark Fedor and Martin Schoffstall, "A
    Simple Network Management Protocol", IDEA-11, February 1988,
    obsoletes RFC-1028 when issued.
    (3) Jeffrey R. Case, James R. Davin, Mark S. Fedor, Martin L.
    Schoffstall, "Introduction to the Simple Gateway Monitoring
    Protocol", IEEE Network Magazine, March 1988.
 CMIS/CMIP
    (1) Amatzia Ben-Artzi, "Network Management for TCP/IP Network: An
    Overview", IDEA-12, February 1988.

Cerf [Page 13] RFC 1052 Internet Management April 1988

    (2) Lee LaBarre, " TCP/IP Network Management Implementors
    Agreements", IDEA-13, January 1988.
    (3) Lee LaBarre, "Data Link Layer Management Information:
    MAC802.3", DRAFT-MMMM, February 1988.
    (4) Lee LaBarre, "Network Layer Management Information: IP",
    DRAFT-NNNN, February 1988.
    (5) Marshall Rose, "ISO Presentation Services on Top of TCP/IP-
    based Internets", DRAFT-PPPP, February 1988.
    (6) Lee LaBarre, "Structure and Identification of Management
    Information for the Internet", DRAFT-SMI, February 1988.
    (7) Lee LaBarre, "Transport Layer Management Information: TCP",
    DRAFT-TTTT, February 1988.
    (8) Lee LaBarre, "Transport Layer Management Information: UDP",
    DRAFT-UUUU, February 1988.
    (9) ISO/IEC JTC 1/21 N 2058, "2nd DP 9595-1 Information Processing
    Systems - Open Systems Interconnection - Management Information
    Service Definition - Part 1: Overview", December 1987.
    (10) ISO/IEC JTC 1/21 N 2059, "2nd DP 9595-2, Information
    Processing Systems - Open Systems Interconnection - Management
    Information Service Definition - Part 2: Common Management
    Information Service Definition", December 1987.
    (11) ISO/IEC JTC 1/21 N 2060, "2nd DP 9596-2, Information
    Processing Systems - Open Systems Interconnection - Management
    Information Protocol Specification - Part 2: Common Management
    Information Protocol", December 1987.
    (12) ISO/TC97/SC21/WG4 N 472, "US Comments on the Proposal for
    Extension of the Common Management Information Services and
    Protocol: Creation and Deletion Functions", November 1987.
    (13) JTC1/SC21/WG4 N 482, "Proposal to extend M-Set and M-
    Confirmed-Set to allow adding and removing values of a multi-
    valued attribute", November 1987.
    (14) S. Mark Klerer, "The OSI Management Architecture: An
    Overview", IEEE Network Magazine, March 1988.

Cerf [Page 14]

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