RFC2287

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Network Working Group C. Krupczak Request for Comments: 2287 Empire Technologies, Inc. Category: Standards Track J. Saperia

                                                   BGS Systems Inc.
                                                      February 1998
  Definitions of System-Level Managed Objects for Applications

Status of this Memo

This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998). All Rights Reserved.

5.2.2 sysApplElmtRunTable and sysApplElmtPastRunTable

Abstract

This memo defines a portion of the Management Information Base (MIB) for use with network management protocols in the Internet community. In particular, it describes a basic set of managed objects for fault, configuration and performance management of applications from a systems perspective. More specifically, the managed objects are restricted to information that can be determined from the system itself and which does not require special instrumentation within the applications to make the information available.

This memo does not specify a standard for the Internet community.

The SNMPv2 Network Management Framework

The SNMPv2 Network Management Framework consists of the following major components:

o RFC 1902 Structure of Management Information for Version

    2 of the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2) [2]

o RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for Version 2 of the Simple

    Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2) [3]

o RFC 1904 Conformance Statements for Version 2 of the

    Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2) [4]

o RFC 1905 Protocol Operations for Version 2 of the Simple

    Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2) [5]

o RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple

    Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2) [6]

o RFC 1907 Management Information Base for Version 2 of the

    Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2) [7]

o RFC 1908 Coexistence between Version 1 and Version 2 of

    the Internet-standard Network Management Framework [8]

The Framework permits new objects to be defined for the purpose of experimentation and evaluation.

Object Definitions

Managed objects are accessed via a virtual information store, termed the Management Information Base or MIB. Objects in the MIB are defined using the subset of Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1) [1], defined in the Structure of Management Information (SMI) (See RFC

1902 [2]). In particular, each object type is named by an OBJECT IDENTIFIER, an administratively assigned name. The object type together with an object instance serves to uniquely identify a specific instantiation of the object. For human convenience, we often use a textual string, termed the object descriptor, to refer to the object type.

Overview

The primary purpose of computing technologies is the execution of application software. These applications, typically specialized collections of executables, files, and interprocess communications, exist to solve business, scientific or other "problems". The configuration, fault detection, performance monitoring and control of application software across its life on a host computer is of great economic importance. For the purposes of our work, we define applications as one or more units of executable code and other resources, installed on a single host system that a manager may think of as a single object for management purposes.

The information described by the objects in the System Application MIB support configuration, fault, and performance management; they represent some of the basic attributes of application software from a systems (non-application specific) perspective. The information allows for the description of applications as collections of executables and files installed and executing on a host computer.

This memo is concerned primarily with, and defines a model for, application information resident on a host computer which can be determined from the system itself, and not from the individual applications. This system-level view of applications is designed to provide information about software applications installed and running on the host system without requiring modifications and code additions to the applications themselves. This approach was taken to insure ease and speed of implementation, while allowing room for future growth.

Architecture for Application Management

In the area of application management it is fully acknowledged and even expected that additional MIB modules will be defined over time to provide an even greater level of detail regarding applications. This MIB module presents the most general case: a set of management objects for providing generic information about applications and whose object values can be determined from the computer system itself without requiring instrumentation within the application.

A finer-grained level of detail is planned for the future "appl MIB" which will be a common set of management objects relating to generic applications, but which require some type of instrumentation in the application in order to be determined. Since the applmib MIB module will provide a finer level of detail, any connection to the sysAppl MIB should be made by having references from the more detailed appl MIB back to the more generic sysAppl MIB. Likewise, as application- specific MIB modules such as the WWW MIB, etc., are developed over time, these more specific MIBs should reference back to the more generic MIBs.

While this MIB module does not attempt to provide every detailed piece of information for managing applications, it does provide a basic systems-level view of the applications and their components on a single host system.

The Structure of the MIB

The System Application MIB structure models application packages as a whole, and also models the individual elements (files and executables) which collectively form an application. The MIB is structured to model information regarding installed application packages and the elements which make up each application package. The MIB also models activity information on applications (and in turn, their components) that are running or have previously run on the host system. In modeling applications and their elements, this MIB module provides the necessary link for associating executing processes with the applications of which they are a part.

The objects are arranged into the following groups:

   -  System Application Installed Group
          - sysApplInstallPkgTable
          - sysApplInstallElmtTable
   -  System Application Run Group
          - sysApplRunTable
          - sysApplPastRunTable
          - sysApplElmtRunTable
          - sysApplElmtPastRunTable
          - (scalars for restricting table sizes)
   -  System Application Map Group
          - sysApplMapTable

As can be seen by the arrangement above, for each category, the MIB first treats an application package as a whole, and then breaks down the package to provide information about each of the elements (executable and non-executable files) of the package.

System Application Installed Group

The System Application Installed group consists of two tables. Through these two tables, administrators will be able to determine which applications have been installed on a system and what their constituent components are. The first table, the sysApplInstallPkgTable, lists the application packages installed on a particular host. The second, the sysApplInstallElmtTable, provides information regarding the executables and non-executable files, or elements, which collectively compose an application.

NOTE: This MIB is intended to work with applications that have been installed on a particular host, where "installed" means that the existence of the application and the association between an application and its component files can be discovered without requiring additional instrumentation of the application itself. This may require that certain conventions be used, such as using a central software installation mechanism or registry, when installing application packages. For example, many UNIX systems utilize a "pkgadd" utility to track installed application packages, while many PC systems utilize a global registry.

System Application Run Group

This group models activity information for applications that have been invoked and are either currently running, or have previously run, on the host system. Likewise, the individual elements of an invoked application are also modeled to show currently running processes, and processes that have run in the past. This information is modeled using two pairs of tables: a pair of tables for currently running applications and past run applications, and a pair of tables for the currently running elements and the past run elements. Seven scalars are also defined to control the size of the past run tables.

sysApplRunTable and sysApplPastRunTable

The sysApplRunTable and the sysApplPastRunTable make up the first pair of tables. The sysApplRunTable contains the application instances which are currently running on the host. Each time an application is invoked, a new entry is created in the sysApplRunTable to provide information about that particular invocation of the application. An entry will remain in this table until the

application instance terminates, at which time the entry will be deleted from the sysApplRunTable and placed in the sysApplPastRunTable.

The sysApplPastRunTable maintains a history of instances of applications which have previously executed on the host. Entries to this table are made when an invoked application from the sysApplRunTable terminates; the table entry which represents the application instance is removed from the SysApplRunTable and a corresponding entry is added to the sysApplPastRunTable.

Because the sysApplPastRunTable will continuously grow as applications are executed and terminate, two scalars are defined to control the aging-out of table entries. The value of sysApplPastRunMaxRows specifies the maximum number of entries the table may contain, while the sysApplPastRunTblTimeLimit specifies the maximum age of the table entries. Oldest entries are removed first.

It is important to note that the sysApplRunTable and sysApplPastRunTable contain entries for each INVOCATION of an application. A single application package might be invoked multiple times; each invocation is properly recorded by a separate entry in the sysApplRunTable.

In order to implement this group, the agent must be able to recognize that an application has been invoked, and be able to determine when that invocation terminates. This poses a complex problem since a single application invocation may involve numerous processes, some of which may be required to remain running throughout the duration of the application, others which might come and go. The sysApplInstallElmtRole columnar object in the sysApplInstallElmtTable is meant to assist in this task by indicating which element is the application's primary executable, which elements must be running in order for the application to be running, which elements are dependent on required elements, etc. See the description of sysApplInstallElmtRole for more details.

sysApplElmtRunTable and sysApplElmtPastRunTable

While the sysApplRunTable and sysApplPastRunTable focus on applications as a whole, the sysApplElmtRunTable and sysApplElmtPastRunTable provide information regarding an application's executable elements, (processes), which are either currently executing or have executed in the past.

The sysApplElmtRunTable contains an entry for every process currently running on the host. An entry is created in this table for each process at the time it is started, and will remain in the table until

the process terminates. Note that in order to provide complete information on the load on the system, this table lists EVERY running process, not just those processes that are running as part of an identified application. However, when processes terminate, only information from entries corresponding to elements of an identified application are moved to the sysApplElmtPastRunTable.

The sysApplElmtPastRunTable maintains a history of processes which have previously executed on the host as part of an application. When a process from the sysApplElmtRunTable terminates, the entry's information is moved to this sysApplElmtPastRunTable provided that the process was part of an identified application. If the process cannot be associated with any 'parent' application, then it is simply removed from the sysApplElmtRunTable. This allows for processes like 'ps' or 'grep' to show up in the sysApplElmtRunTable, (where they are consuming resources and are thus "interesting"), but not in the sysApplElmtPastRunTable.

Because the sysApplElmtPastRunTable will continuously grow as processes are executed and terminate, two scalars are defined to control the aging-out of table entries. The value of sysApplElmtPastRunMaxRows specifies the maximum number of entries the table may contain, while the sysApplElmtPastRunTblTimeLimit specifies the maximum age of the table entries. Oldest entries are removed first.

System Application Map Group

The System Application Map group contains a single table, the sysApplMapTable, whose sole purpose is to provide a backwards mapping for determining the invoked application, installed element, and installed application package given a known process identification number.

Definitions

SYSAPPL-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN

IMPORTS

   MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE,
   Unsigned32, TimeTicks, Counter32, Gauge32
       FROM SNMPv2-SMI
   DateAndTime, TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
       FROM SNMPv2-TC
   MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP
       FROM SNMPv2-CONF
   mib-2 FROM SNMPv2-SMI;

-- System Application MIB

sysApplMIB MODULE-IDENTITY

   LAST-UPDATED "9710200000Z"
   ORGANIZATION "IETF Applications MIB Working Group"
   CONTACT-INFO
         "Cheryl Krupczak (Editor, WG Advisor)
          Postal: Empire Technologies, Inc.
          541 Tenth Street NW
          Suite 169
          Atlanta, GA 30318
          USA
          Phone: (770) 384-0184
          Email: [email protected]
          Jon Saperia (WG Chair)
          Postal:  BGS Systems, Inc.
          One First Avenue
          Waltham, MA 02254-9111
          USA
          Phone: (617) 891-0000
          Email: [email protected]"
   DESCRIPTION
       "The MIB module defines management objects that model
       applications as collections of executables and files
       installed and executing on a host system.  The MIB
       presents a system-level view of applications; i.e.,
       objects in this MIB are limited to those attributes
       that can typically be obtained from the system itself
       without adding special instrumentation to the applications."
   ::= { mib-2 54  }

sysApplOBJ OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { sysApplMIB 1 } sysApplInstalled OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { sysApplOBJ 1 } sysApplRun OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { sysApplOBJ 2 } sysApplMap OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { sysApplOBJ 3 } sysApplNotifications OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { sysApplMIB 2 } sysApplConformance OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { sysApplMIB 3 }

-- Textual Conventions

RunState ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION

   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "This TC describes the current execution state of
       a running application or process.  The possible
       values are:
         running(1),
         runnable(2),  - waiting for a resource (CPU, etc.)
         waiting(3),   - waiting for an event
         exiting(4),
         other(5)      - other invalid state"
   SYNTAX      INTEGER {
               running (1),
               runnable (2), -- waiting for resource (CPU, etc.)
               waiting (3),  -- waiting for event
               exiting (4),
               other (5)     -- other invalid state
               }
LongUtf8String ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
     DISPLAY-HINT "1024a"
     STATUS  current
     DESCRIPTION
             "To facilitate internationalization, this TC
              represents information taken from the ISO/IEC IS
              10646-1 character set, encoded as an octet string
              using the UTF-8 character encoding scheme described
              in RFC 2044 [10].  For strings in 7-bit US-ASCII,
              there is no impact since the UTF-8 representation
              is identical to the US-ASCII encoding."
     SYNTAX  OCTET STRING (SIZE (0..1024))
Utf8String ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
     DISPLAY-HINT "255a"
     STATUS  current
     DESCRIPTION
             "To facilitate internationalization, this TC
              represents information taken from the ISO/IEC IS
              10646-1 character set, encoded as an octet string
              using the UTF-8 character encoding scheme described
              in RFC 2044 [10].  For strings in 7-bit US-ASCII,
              there is no impact since the UTF-8 representation
              is identical to the US-ASCII encoding."
     SYNTAX  OCTET STRING (SIZE (0..255))

-- sysApplInstalled Group -- This group provides information about application packages -- that have been installed on the host computer. The group -- contains two tables. The first, the sysApplInstallPkgTable, -- describes the application packages, the second, the -- sysApplInstallElmtTable, describes the constituent elements -- (files and executables) which compose an application package.

-- -- In order to appear in this group, an application and its -- component files must be discoverable by the system itself, -- possibly through some type of software installation mechanism -- or registry.

-- sysApplInstallPkgTable -- The system installed application packages table provides -- information on the software packages installed on a system. -- These packages may consist of many different files including -- executable and non-executable files.

sysApplInstallPkgTable OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF SysApplInstallPkgEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The table listing the software application packages
       installed on a host computer. In order to appear in
       this table, it may be necessary for the application
       to be installed using some type of software
       installation mechanism or global registry so that its
       existence can be detected by the agent implementation."
   ::= { sysApplInstalled 1 }

sysApplInstallPkgEntry OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SysApplInstallPkgEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The logical row describing an installed application
       package."
   INDEX    { sysApplInstallPkgIndex }
   ::= { sysApplInstallPkgTable 1 }

SysApplInstallPkgEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

   sysApplInstallPkgIndex               Unsigned32,
   sysApplInstallPkgManufacturer        Utf8String,
   sysApplInstallPkgProductName         Utf8String,
   sysApplInstallPkgVersion             Utf8String,
   sysApplInstallPkgSerialNumber        Utf8String,
   sysApplInstallPkgDate                DateAndTime,
   sysApplInstallPkgLocation            LongUtf8String

}

sysApplInstallPkgIndex OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "An integer used only for indexing purposes.
       Generally monotonically increasing from 1 as new
       applications are installed.
       The value for each installed application must
       remain constant at least from one re-initialization of
       the network management entity which implements this
       MIB module to the next re-initialization.
       The specific value is meaningful only within a given SNMP
       entity. A sysApplInstallPkgIndex value must not be re-used
       until the next agent entity restart in the event the
       installed application entry is deleted."
   ::= { sysApplInstallPkgEntry 1 }

sysApplInstallPkgManufacturer OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Utf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The Manufacturer of the software application package."
   ::= { sysApplInstallPkgEntry 2 }

sysApplInstallPkgProductName OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Utf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The name assigned to the software application package
       by the Manufacturer."
   ::= { sysApplInstallPkgEntry 3 }

sysApplInstallPkgVersion OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Utf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The version number assigned to the application package
       by the manufacturer of the software."
   ::= { sysApplInstallPkgEntry 4 }

sysApplInstallPkgSerialNumber OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Utf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The serial number of the software assigned by the
       manufacturer."
   ::= { sysApplInstallPkgEntry 5 }

sysApplInstallPkgDate OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      DateAndTime
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The date and time this software application was installed
       on the host."
   ::= { sysApplInstallPkgEntry 6 }

sysApplInstallPkgLocation OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      LongUtf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The complete path name where the application package
       is installed.  For example, the value would be
       '/opt/MyapplDir' if the application package was installed
       in the /opt/MyapplDir directory."
   ::= { sysApplInstallPkgEntry 7 }

-- sysApplInstallElmtTable -- The table describing the individual application package -- elements (files and executables) installed on the host computer.

sysApplInstallElmtTable OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF SysApplInstallElmtEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "This table details the individual application package
       elements (files and executables) which comprise the
       applications defined in the sysApplInstallPkg Table.
       Each entry in this table has an index to the
       sysApplInstallPkg table to identify the application
       package of which it is a part. As a result, there may
       be many entries in this table for each instance in the
       sysApplInstallPkg Table.
       Table entries are indexed by sysApplInstallPkgIndex,
       sysApplInstallElmtIndex to facilitate retrieval of
       all elements associated with a particular installed
       application package."
   ::= { sysApplInstalled 2 }

sysApplInstallElmtEntry OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SysApplInstallElmtEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The logical row describing an element of an installed
       application.  The element may be an executable or
       non-executable file."
   INDEX    {sysApplInstallPkgIndex, sysApplInstallElmtIndex}
   ::= { sysApplInstallElmtTable 1 }

SysApplInstallElmtEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

   sysApplInstallElmtIndex                 Unsigned32,
   sysApplInstallElmtName                  Utf8String,
   sysApplInstallElmtType                  INTEGER,
   sysApplInstallElmtDate                  DateAndTime,
   sysApplInstallElmtPath                  LongUtf8String,
   sysApplInstallElmtSizeHigh              Unsigned32,
   sysApplInstallElmtSizeLow               Unsigned32,
   sysApplInstallElmtRole                  BITS,
   sysApplInstallElmtModifyDate            DateAndTime,
   sysApplInstallElmtCurSizeHigh           Unsigned32,
   sysApplInstallElmtCurSizeLow            Unsigned32

}

sysApplInstallElmtIndex OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "An arbitrary integer used for indexing.  The value
       of this index is unique among all rows in this table
       that exist or have existed since the last agent restart."
   ::= { sysApplInstallElmtEntry 1 }

sysApplInstallElmtName OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Utf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The name of this element which is contained in the
       application."
   ::= { sysApplInstallElmtEntry 2 }

sysApplInstallElmtType OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      INTEGER {
               unknown(1),
               nonexecutable(2),
               operatingSystem(3),  -- executable
               deviceDriver(4),     -- executable
               application(5)       -- executable
               }
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The type of element that is part of the installed
       application."
   ::= { sysApplInstallElmtEntry 3 }

sysApplInstallElmtDate OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      DateAndTime
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The date and time that this component was installed on
       the system."
   ::= { sysApplInstallElmtEntry 4 }

sysApplInstallElmtPath OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      LongUtf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The full directory path where this element is installed.
       For example, the value would be '/opt/EMPuma/bin' for an
       element installed in the directory '/opt/EMPuma/bin'.
       Most application packages include information about the
       elements contained in the package. In addition, elements
       are typically installed in sub-directories under the
       package installation directory.  In cases where the
       element path names are not included in the package
       information itself, the path can usually be determined
       by a simple search of the sub-directories.  If the
       element is not installed in that location and there is
       no other information available to the agent implementation,
       then the path is unknown and null is returned."
   ::= { sysApplInstallElmtEntry 5}

sysApplInstallElmtSizeHigh OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The installed file size in 2^32 byte blocks. This is
       the size of the file on disk immediately after installation.
       For example, for a file with a total size of 4,294,967,296
       bytes, this variable would have a value of 1; for a file
       with a total size of 4,294,967,295 bytes this variable
       would be 0."
   ::= { sysApplInstallElmtEntry 6 }

sysApplInstallElmtSizeLow OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The installed file size modulo 2^32 bytes.  This is
       the size of the file on disk immediately after installation.
       For example, for a file with a total size of 4,294,967,296
       bytes this variable would have a value of 0; for a file with
       a total size of 4,294,967,295 bytes this variable would be
       4,294,967,295."
   ::= { sysApplInstallElmtEntry 7 }

sysApplInstallElmtRole OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      BITS {
               executable(0),
                  -- An application may have one or
                  -- more executable elements.  The rest of the
                  -- bits have no meaning if the element is not
                  -- executable.
               exclusive(1),
                  -- Only one copy of an exclusive element may be
                  -- running per invocation of the running
                  -- application.
               primary(2),
                  -- The primary executable.  An application can
                  -- have one, and only one element that is designated
                  -- as the primary executable.  The execution of
                  -- this element constitutes an invocation of
                  -- the application.  This is used by the agent
                  -- implementation to determine the initiation of
                  -- an application.  The primary executable must
                  -- remain running long enough for the agent
                  -- implementation to detect its presence.
               required(3),
                  -- An application may have zero or more required
                  -- elements. All required elements must be running
                  -- in order for the application to be judged to be
                  -- running and healthy.
               dependent(4),
                  -- An application may have zero or more
                  -- dependent elements. Dependent elements may
                  -- not be running unless required elements are.
               unknown(5)
                  -- Default value for the case when an operator
                  -- has not yet assigned one of the other values.
                  -- When set, bits 1, 2, 3, and 4 have no meaning.
               }
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "An operator assigned value used in the determination of
       application status. This value is used by the agent to
       determine both the mapping of started processes to the
       initiation of an application, as well as to allow for a
       determination of application health. The default value,
       unknown(5), is used when an operator has not yet assigned
       one of the other values.  If unknown(5) is set, bits
       1 - 4 have no meaning.  The possible values are:
               executable(0),
                   An application may have one or
                   more executable elements.  The rest of the
                   bits have no meaning if the element is not
                   executable.
               exclusive(1),
                   Only one copy of an exclusive element may be
                   running per invocation of the running
                   application.
               primary(2),
                   The primary executable.  An application can
                   have one, and only one element that is designated
                   as the primary executable.  The execution of
                   this element constitutes an invocation of
                   the application.  This is used by the agent
                   implementation to determine the initiation of
                   an application.  The primary executable must
                   remain running long enough for the agent
                   implementation to detect its presence.
               required(3),
                   An application may have zero or more required
                   elements. All required elements must be running
                   in order for the application to be judged to be
                   running and healthy.
               dependent(4),
                   An application may have zero or more
                   dependent elements. Dependent elements may
                   not be running unless required elements are.
               unknown(5)
                   Default value for the case when an operator
                   has not yet assigned one of the other values.
                   When set, bits 1, 2, 3, and 4 have no meaning.
        sysApplInstallElmtRole is used by the agent implementation
        in determining the initiation of an application, the
        current state of a running application (see
        sysApplRunCurrentState), when an application invocation is
        no longer running, and the exit status of a terminated
        application invocation (see sysApplPastRunExitState)."
   DEFVAL { { unknown } }
   ::= { sysApplInstallElmtEntry 8 }

sysApplInstallElmtModifyDate OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      DateAndTime
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The date and time that this element was last modified.
       Modification of the sysApplInstallElmtRole columnar
       object does NOT constitute a modification of the element
       itself and should not affect the value of this object."
   ::= { sysApplInstallElmtEntry 9 }

sysApplInstallElmtCurSizeHigh OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The current file size in 2^32 byte blocks.
       For example, for a file with a total size of 4,294,967,296
       bytes, this variable would have a value of 1; for a file
       with a total size of 4,294,967,295 bytes this variable
       would be 0."
   ::= { sysApplInstallElmtEntry 10 }

sysApplInstallElmtCurSizeLow OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The current file size modulo 2^32 bytes.
       For example, for a file with a total size of 4,294,967,296
       bytes this variable would have a value of 0; for a file with
       a total size of 4,294,967,295 bytes this variable would be
       4,294,967,295."
   ::= { sysApplInstallElmtEntry 11 }

-- sysApplRun Group -- This group models activity information for applications -- that have been invoked and are either currently running, -- or have previously run on the host system. Likewise, -- the individual elements of an invoked application are -- also modeled to show currently running processes, and -- processes that have run in the past.

-- sysApplRunTable -- The sysApplRunTable contains the application instances -- which are currently running on the host. Since a single -- application might be invoked multiple times, an entry is -- added to this table for each INVOCATION of an application. -- The table is indexed by sysApplInstallPkgIndex, sysApplRunIndex -- to enable managers to easily locate all invocations of -- a particular application package.

sysApplRunTable OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF SysApplRunEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The table describes the applications which are executing
       on the host.  Each time an application is invoked,
       an entry is created in this table. When an application ends,
       the entry is removed from this table and a corresponding
               entry is created in the SysApplPastRunTable.
       A new entry is created in this table whenever the agent
       implementation detects a new running process that is an
       installed application element whose sysApplInstallElmtRole
       designates it as being the application's primary executable
       (sysApplInstallElmtRole = primary(2) ).
       The table is indexed by sysApplInstallPkgIndex,
       sysApplRunIndex to enable managers to easily locate all
       invocations of a particular application package."
   ::= { sysApplRun 1 }

sysApplRunEntry OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SysApplRunEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The logical row describing an application which is
       currently running on this host."
   INDEX    { sysApplInstallPkgIndex, sysApplRunIndex }
   ::= { sysApplRunTable   1 }

SysApplRunEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

   sysApplRunIndex                         Unsigned32,
   sysApplRunStarted                       DateAndTime,
   sysApplRunCurrentState                  RunState

}

sysApplRunIndex OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Part of the index for this table. An arbitrary
       integer used only for indexing purposes. Generally
       monotonically increasing from 1 as new applications are
       started on the host, it uniquely identifies application
       invocations.
       The numbering for this index increases by 1 for each
       INVOCATION of an application, regardless of which
       installed application package this entry represents a
       running instance of.
       An example of the indexing for a couple of entries is
       shown below.
                     :
                sysApplRunStarted.17.14
                sysApplRunStarted.17.63
                sysApplRunStarted.18.13
                     :
       In this example, the agent has observed 12 application
       invocations when the application represented by entry 18
       in the sysApplInstallPkgTable is invoked.  The next
       invocation detected by the agent is an invocation of
       installed application package 17.  Some time later,
       installed application 17 is invoked a second time.
       NOTE: this index is not intended to reflect a real-time
       (wall clock time) ordering of application invocations;
       it is merely intended to uniquely identify running
       instances of applications.  Although the
       sysApplInstallPkgIndex is included in the INDEX clause
       for this table, it serves only to ease searching of
       this table by installed application and does not
       contribute to uniquely identifying table entries."
   ::= { sysApplRunEntry 1 }

sysApplRunStarted OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      DateAndTime
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The date and time that the application was started."
   ::= { sysApplRunEntry 2 }

sysApplRunCurrentState OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      RunState
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The current state of the running application instance.
       The possible values are running(1), runnable(2) but waiting
       for a resource such as CPU, waiting(3) for an event,
       exiting(4), or other(5). This value is based on an evaluation
       of the running elements of this application instance (see
       sysApplElmRunState) and their Roles as defined by
       sysApplInstallElmtRole.  An agent implementation may
       detect that an application instance is in the process of
       exiting if one or more of its REQUIRED elements are no
       longer running.  Most agent implementations will wait until
       a second internal poll has been completed to give the
       system time to start REQUIRED elements before marking the
       application instance as exiting."
   ::= { sysApplRunEntry 3 }

-- sysApplPastRunTable -- The sysApplPastRunTable provides a history of applications -- previously run on the host computer. Entries are removed from -- the sysApplRunTable and corresponding entries are added to this -- table when an application becomes inactive. Entries remain in -- this table until they are aged out when either the table size -- reaches a maximum as determined by the sysApplPastRunMaxRows, -- or when an entry has aged to exceed a time limit as set be -- sysApplPastRunTblTimeLimit. -- -- When aging out entries, the oldest entry, as determined by

-- the value of sysApplPastRunTimeEnded, will be removed first.

sysApplPastRunTable OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF SysApplPastRunEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "A history of the applications that have previously run
       on the host computer.  An entry's information is moved to
       this table from the sysApplRunTable when the invoked
       application represented by the entry ceases to be running.
       An agent implementation can determine that an application
       invocation is no longer running by evaluating the running
       elements of the application instance and their Roles as
       defined by sysApplInstallElmtRole.  Obviously, if there
       are no running elements for the application instance,
       then the application invocation is no longer running.
       If any one of the REQUIRED elements is not running,
       the application instance may be in the process of exiting.
       Most agent implementations will wait until a second internal
       poll has been completed to give the system time to either
       restart partial failures or to give all elements time to
       exit.  If, after the second poll, there are REQUIRED
       elements that are not running, then the application
       instance may be considered by the agent implementation
       to no longer be running.
       Entries remain in the sysApplPastRunTable until they
       are aged out when either the table size reaches a maximum
       as determined by the sysApplPastRunMaxRows, or when an entry
       has aged to exceed a time limit as set by
       sysApplPastRunTblTimeLimit.
       Entries in this table are indexed by sysApplInstallPkgIndex,
       sysApplPastRunIndex to facilitate retrieval of all past
       run invocations of a particular installed application."
   ::= { sysApplRun 2 }

sysApplPastRunEntry OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SysApplPastRunEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The logical row describing an invocation of an application
       which was previously run and has terminated.  The entry
       is basically copied from the sysApplRunTable when the
       application instance terminates.  Hence, the entry's
       value for sysApplPastRunIndex is the same as its value was
       for sysApplRunIndex."
   INDEX    { sysApplInstallPkgIndex, sysApplPastRunIndex }
   ::= { sysApplPastRunTable   1 }

SysApplPastRunEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

   sysApplPastRunIndex                     Unsigned32,
   sysApplPastRunStarted                   DateAndTime,
   sysApplPastRunExitState                 INTEGER,
   sysApplPastRunTimeEnded                 DateAndTime

}

sysApplPastRunIndex OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Part of the index for this table. An integer
       matching the value of the removed sysApplRunIndex
       corresponding to this row."
   ::= { sysApplPastRunEntry 1 }

sysApplPastRunStarted OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      DateAndTime
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The date and time that the application was started."
   ::= { sysApplPastRunEntry 2 }

sysApplPastRunExitState OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      INTEGER {
               complete (1), -- normal exit at sysApplRunTimeEnded
               failed (2),   -- abnormal exit
               other (3)
               }
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
     "The state of the application instance when it terminated.
      This value is based on an evaluation of the running elements
      of an application and their Roles as defined by
      sysApplInstallElmtRole.  An application instance is said to
      have exited in a COMPLETE state and its entry is removed
      from the sysApplRunTable and added to the sysApplPastRunTable
      when the agent detects that ALL elements of an application
      invocation are no longer running.  Most agent implementations
      will wait until a second internal poll has been completed to
      give the system time to either restart partial failures or
      to give all elements time to exit.  A failed state occurs if,
      after the second poll, any elements continue to run but
      one or more of the REQUIRED elements are no longer running.
      All other combinations MUST be defined as OTHER."
   ::= { sysApplPastRunEntry 3 }

sysApplPastRunTimeEnded OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      DateAndTime
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The DateAndTime the application instance was determined
       to be no longer running."
   ::= { sysApplPastRunEntry 4 }

-- sysApplElmtRunTable -- The sysApplElmtRunTable contains an entry for each process that -- is currently running on the host. An entry is created in -- this table for each process at the time it is started, and will -- remain in the table until the process terminates. -- -- The table is indexed by sysApplElmtRunInstallPkg, -- sysApplElmtRunInvocID, and sysApplElmtRunIndex to make it easy -- to locate all running elements of a particular invoked application -- which has been installed on the system.

sysApplElmtRunTable OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF SysApplElmtRunEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The table describes the processes which are
       currently executing on the host system. Each entry
       represents a running process and is associated with
       the invoked application of which that process is a part, if
       possible.  This table contains an entry for every process
       currently running on the system, regardless of whether its
       'parent' application can be determined.  So, for example,
       processes like 'ps' and 'grep' will have entries though they
       are not associated with an installed application package.
       Because a running application may involve
       more than one executable, it is possible to have
       multiple entries in this table for each application.
       Entries are removed from this table when the process
       terminates.
       The table is indexed by sysApplElmtRunInstallPkg,
       sysApplElmtRunInvocID, and sysApplElmtRunIndex to
       facilitate the retrieval of all running elements of a
       particular invoked application which has been installed on
       the system."
   ::= { sysApplRun 3 }

sysApplElmtRunEntry OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SysApplElmtRunEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The logical row describing a process currently
       running on this host.  When possible, the entry is
       associated with the invoked application of which it
       is a part."
   INDEX    { sysApplElmtRunInstallPkg, sysApplElmtRunInvocID,
              sysApplElmtRunIndex }
   ::= { sysApplElmtRunTable   1 }

SysApplElmtRunEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

   sysApplElmtRunInstallPkg        Unsigned32,
   sysApplElmtRunInvocID           Unsigned32,
   sysApplElmtRunIndex             Unsigned32,
   sysApplElmtRunInstallID         Unsigned32,
   sysApplElmtRunTimeStarted       DateAndTime,
   sysApplElmtRunState             RunState,
   sysApplElmtRunName              LongUtf8String,
   sysApplElmtRunParameters        Utf8String,
   sysApplElmtRunCPU               TimeTicks,
   sysApplElmtRunMemory            Gauge32,
   sysApplElmtRunNumFiles          Gauge32,
   sysApplElmtRunUser              Utf8String

}

sysApplElmtRunInstallPkg OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Part of the index for this table, this value
       identifies the installed software package for
       the application of which this process is a part.
       Provided that the process's 'parent' application can be
       determined, the value of this object is the same
       value as the sysApplInstallPkgIndex for the
       entry in the sysApplInstallPkgTable that corresponds
       to the installed application of which this process
       is a part.
       If, however, the 'parent' application cannot be
       determined, (for example the process is not part
       of a particular installed application), the value
       for this object is then '0', signifying that this
       process cannot be related back to an application,
       and in turn, an installed software package."
   ::= { sysApplElmtRunEntry 1 }

sysApplElmtRunInvocID OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Part of the index for this table, this value
       identifies the invocation of an application of which
       this process is a part.  Provided that the 'parent'
       application can be determined, the value of this object
       is the same value as the sysApplRunIndex for the
       corresponding application invocation in the
       sysApplRunTable.
       If, however, the 'parent' application cannot be
       determined, the value for this object is then '0',
       signifying that this process cannot be related back
       to an invocation of an application in the
       sysApplRunTable."
   ::= { sysApplElmtRunEntry 2 }

sysApplElmtRunIndex OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Part of the index for this table.  A unique value
       for each process running on the host.  Wherever
       possible, this should be the system's native, unique
       identification number."
   ::= { sysApplElmtRunEntry 3 }

sysApplElmtRunInstallID OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The index into the sysApplInstallElmtTable. The
       value of this object is the same value as the
       sysApplInstallElmtIndex for the application element
       of which this entry represents a running instance.
       If this process cannot be associated with an installed
       executable, the value should be '0'."
   ::= { sysApplElmtRunEntry 4 }

sysApplElmtRunTimeStarted OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      DateAndTime
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The time the process was started."
   ::= { sysApplElmtRunEntry 5 }

sysApplElmtRunState OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      RunState
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The current state of the running process. The
       possible values are running(1), runnable(2) but waiting
       for a resource such as CPU, waiting(3) for an event,
       exiting(4), or other(5)."
   ::= { sysApplElmtRunEntry 6 }

sysApplElmtRunName OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      LongUtf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The full path and filename of the process.
       For example, '/opt/MYYpkg/bin/myyproc' would
       be returned for process 'myyproc' whose execution
       path is '/opt/MYYpkg/bin/myyproc'."
   ::= { sysApplElmtRunEntry 7 }

sysApplElmtRunParameters OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Utf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The starting parameters for the process."
= { sysApplElmtRunEntry 8 }

sysApplElmtRunCPU OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      TimeTicks
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
        "The number of centi-seconds of the total system's
        CPU resources consumed by this process.  Note that
        on a multi-processor system, this value may
        have been incremented by more than one centi-second
        in one centi-second of real (wall clock) time."
   ::= { sysApplElmtRunEntry 9 }

sysApplElmtRunMemory OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Gauge32
   UNITS       "Kbytes"
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The total amount of real system memory measured in
       Kbytes currently allocated to this process."
   ::= { sysApplElmtRunEntry 10 }

sysApplElmtRunNumFiles OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Gauge32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The number of regular files currently open by the
       process.  Transport connections (sockets)
       should NOT be included in the calculation of
       this value, nor should operating system specific
       special file types."
   ::= { sysApplElmtRunEntry 11 }

sysApplElmtRunUser OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Utf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The process owner's login name (e.g. root)."
   ::= { sysApplElmtRunEntry 12 }

-- sysApplElmtPastRunTable -- The sysApplElmtPastRunTable maintains a history of -- processes which have previously executed on -- the host as part of an application. Upon termination -- of a process, the entry representing the process is removed from -- the sysApplElmtRunTable and a corresponding entry is created in -- this table provided that the process was part of an -- identifiable application. If the process could not be associated

-- with an invoked application, no corresponding entry is created. -- Hence, whereas the sysApplElmtRunTable contains an entry for -- every process currently executing on the system, the -- sysApplElmtPastRunTable only contains entries for processes -- that previously executed as part of an invoked application. -- -- Entries remain in this table until they are aged out when -- either the number of entries in the table reaches a -- maximum as determined by sysApplElmtPastRunMaxRows, or -- when an entry has aged to exceed a time limit as set by -- sysApplElmtPastRunTblTimeLimit. When aging out entries, -- the oldest entry, as determined by the value of -- sysApplElmtPastRunTimeEnded, will be removed first. -- -- The table is indexed by sysApplInstallPkgIndex (from the -- sysApplInstallPkgTable), sysApplElmtPastRunInvocID, and -- sysApplElmtPastRunIndex to make it easy to locate all -- previously executed processes of a particular invoked application -- that has been installed on the system.

sysApplElmtPastRunTable OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF SysApplElmtPastRunEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The table describes the processes which have previously
       executed on the host system as part of an application.
       Each entry represents a process which has previously
       executed and is associated with the invoked application
       of which it was a part.  Because an invoked application
       may involve more than one executable, it is possible
       to have multiple entries in this table for
       each application invocation. Entries are added
       to this table when the corresponding process in the
       sysApplElmtRun Table terminates.
       Entries remain in this table until they are aged out when
       either the number of entries in the table reaches a
       maximum as determined by sysApplElmtPastRunMaxRows, or
       when an entry has aged to exceed a time limit as set by
       sysApplElmtPastRunTblTimeLimit.  When aging out entries,
       the oldest entry, as determined by the value of
       sysApplElmtPastRunTimeEnded, will be removed first.
       The table is indexed by sysApplInstallPkgIndex (from the
       sysApplInstallPkgTable), sysApplElmtPastRunInvocID,
       and sysApplElmtPastRunIndex to make it easy to locate all
       previously executed processes of a particular invoked
       application that has been installed on the system."
   ::= { sysApplRun 4 }

sysApplElmtPastRunEntry OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SysApplElmtPastRunEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The logical row describing a process which was
       previously executed on this host as part of an
       installed application.  The entry is basically copied
       from the sysApplElmtRunTable when the process
       terminates.  Hence, the entry's value for
       sysApplElmtPastRunIndex is the same as its value
       was for sysApplElmtRunIndex.  Note carefully: only those
       processes which could be associated with an
       identified application are included in this table."
   INDEX    { sysApplInstallPkgIndex, sysApplElmtPastRunInvocID,
              sysApplElmtPastRunIndex }
   ::= { sysApplElmtPastRunTable   1 }

SysApplElmtPastRunEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

   sysApplElmtPastRunInvocID           Unsigned32,
   sysApplElmtPastRunIndex             Unsigned32,
   sysApplElmtPastRunInstallID         Unsigned32,
   sysApplElmtPastRunTimeStarted       DateAndTime,
   sysApplElmtPastRunTimeEnded         DateAndTime,
   sysApplElmtPastRunName              LongUtf8String,
   sysApplElmtPastRunParameters        Utf8String,
   sysApplElmtPastRunCPU               TimeTicks,
   sysApplElmtPastRunMemory            Unsigned32,
   sysApplElmtPastRunNumFiles          Unsigned32,
   sysApplElmtPastRunUser              Utf8String

}

sysApplElmtPastRunInvocID OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Part of the index for this table, this value
       identifies the invocation of an application of which
       the process represented by this entry was a part.
       The value of this object is the same value as the
       sysApplRunIndex for the corresponding application
       invocation in the sysApplRunTable.  If the invoked
       application as a whole has terminated, it will be the
       same as the sysApplPastRunIndex."
   ::= { sysApplElmtPastRunEntry 1 }

sysApplElmtPastRunIndex OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Part of the index for this table. An integer
       assigned by the agent equal to the corresponding
       sysApplElmtRunIndex which was removed from the
       sysApplElmtRunTable and moved to this table
       when the element terminated.
       Note: entries in this table are indexed by
       sysApplElmtPastRunInvocID, sysApplElmtPastRunIndex.
       The possibility exists, though unlikely, of a
       collision occurring by a new entry which was run
       by the same invoked application (InvocID), and
       was assigned the same process identification number
       (ElmtRunIndex) as an element which was previously
       run by the same invoked application.
       Should this situation occur, the new entry replaces
       the old entry.
       See Section: 'Implementation Issues -
       sysApplElmtPastRunTable Entry Collisions' for the
       conditions that would have to occur in order for a
       collision to occur."
   ::= { sysApplElmtPastRunEntry 2 }

sysApplElmtPastRunInstallID OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The index into the installed element table. The
       value of this object is the same value as the
       sysApplInstallElmtIndex for the application element
       of which this entry represents a previously executed
       process."
   ::= { sysApplElmtPastRunEntry 3 }

sysApplElmtPastRunTimeStarted OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      DateAndTime
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The time the process was started."
   ::= { sysApplElmtPastRunEntry 4 }

sysApplElmtPastRunTimeEnded OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      DateAndTime
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The time the process ended."
   ::= { sysApplElmtPastRunEntry 5 }

sysApplElmtPastRunName OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      LongUtf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The full path and filename of the process.
       For example, '/opt/MYYpkg/bin/myyproc' would
       be returned for process 'myyproc' whose execution
       path was '/opt/MYYpkg/bin/myyproc'."
   ::= { sysApplElmtPastRunEntry 6 }

sysApplElmtPastRunParameters OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Utf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The starting parameters for the process."
   ::= { sysApplElmtPastRunEntry 7 }

sysApplElmtPastRunCPU OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      TimeTicks
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
        "The last known number of centi-seconds of the total
        system's CPU resources consumed by this process.
        Note that on a multi-processor system, this value may
        increment by more than one centi-second in one
        centi-second of real (wall clock) time."
   ::= { sysApplElmtPastRunEntry 8 }

sysApplElmtPastRunMemory OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   UNITS       "Kbytes"
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The last known total amount of real system memory
       measured in Kbytes allocated to this process before it
       terminated."
   ::= { sysApplElmtPastRunEntry 9 }

sysApplElmtPastRunNumFiles OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The last known number of files open by the
       process before it terminated.  Transport
       connections (sockets) should NOT be included in
       the calculation of this value."
   ::= { sysApplElmtPastRunEntry 10 }

sysApplElmtPastRunUser OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Utf8String
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The process owner's login name (e.g. root)."
   ::= { sysApplElmtPastRunEntry 11 }

-- Additional Scalar objects to control table sizes

sysApplPastRunMaxRows OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The maximum number of entries allowed in the
       sysApplPastRunTable.  Once the number of rows in
       the sysApplPastRunTable reaches this value, the
       management subsystem will remove the oldest entry
       in the table to make room for the new entry to be added.
       Entries will be removed on the basis of oldest
       sysApplPastRunTimeEnded value first.
       This object may be used to control the amount of
       system resources that can used for sysApplPastRunTable
       entries. A conforming implementation should attempt
       to support the default value, however, a lesser value
       may be necessary due to implementation-dependent issues
       and resource availability."
   DEFVAL      { 500 }
   ::= { sysApplRun 5 }

sysApplPastRunTableRemItems OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Counter32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "A counter of the number of entries removed from
       the sysApplPastRunTable because of table size limitations
       as set in sysApplPastRunMaxRows.  This counter is the
       number of entries the management subsystem has had to
       remove in order to make room for new entries (so as not
       to exceed the limit set by sysApplPastRunMaxRows) since
       the last initialization of the management subsystem."
   ::= { sysApplRun 6 }

sysApplPastRunTblTimeLimit OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   UNITS       "seconds"
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The maximum time in seconds which an entry in the
        sysApplPastRunTable may exist before it is removed.
        Any entry that is older than this value will be
        removed (aged out) from the table.
        Note that an entry may be aged out prior to reaching
        this time limit if it is the oldest entry in the
        table and must be removed to make space for a new
        entry so as to not exceed sysApplPastRunMaxRows."
   DEFVAL      { 7200 }
   ::= { sysApplRun 7 }

sysApplElemPastRunMaxRows OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The maximum number of entries allowed in the
       sysApplElmtPastRunTable.  Once the number of rows in
       the sysApplElmtPastRunTable reaches this value,
       the management subsystem will remove the oldest entry
       to make room for the new entry to be added.  Entries
       will be removed on the basis of oldest
       sysApplElmtPastRunTimeEnded value first.
       This object may be used to control the amount of
       system resources that can used for sysApplElemPastRunTable
       entries. A conforming implementation should attempt
       to support the default value, however, a lesser value
       may be necessary due to implementation-dependent issues
       and resource availability."
   DEFVAL      { 500 }
   ::= { sysApplRun 8 }

sysApplElemPastRunTableRemItems OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Counter32
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "A counter of the number of entries removed from the
       sysApplElemPastRunTable because of table size limitations
       as set in sysApplElemPastRunMaxRows.  This counter is the
       number of entries the management subsystem has had to
       remove in order to make room for new entries (so as not
       to exceed the limit set by sysApplElemPastRunMaxRows) since
       the last initialization of the management subsystem."
   ::= { sysApplRun 9 }

sysApplElemPastRunTblTimeLimit OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   UNITS       "seconds"
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The maximum time in seconds which an entry in the
        sysApplElemPastRunTable may exist before it is removed.
        Any entry that is older than this value will be
        removed (aged out) from the table.
        Note that an entry may be aged out prior to reaching
        this time limit if it is the oldest entry in the
        table and must be removed to make space for a new
        entry so as to not exceed sysApplElemPastRunMaxRows."
   DEFVAL      { 7200 }
   ::= { sysApplRun 10 }

sysApplAgentPollInterval OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   UNITS       "seconds"
   MAX-ACCESS  read-write
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The minimum interval in seconds that the management
       subsystem implementing this MIB will poll the status
       of the managed resources. Because of the non-trivial
       effort involved in polling the managed resources,
       and because the method for obtaining the status of
       the managed resources is implementation-dependent,
       a conformant implementation may chose a lower bound
       greater than 0.
       A value of 0 indicates that there is no delay
       in the passing of information from the managed
       resources to the agent."
   DEFVAL      { 60 }
   ::= { sysApplRun 11 }

-- sysApplMap Group -- This group contains a table, the sysApplMapTable, -- whose sole purpose is to provide a 'backwards' -- mapping so that, given a known sysApplElmtRunIndex -- (process identification number), the corresponding invoked -- application (sysApplRunIndex), installed element -- (sysApplInstallElmtIndex), and installed application -- package (sysApplInstallPkgIndex) can be quickly determined. -- -- The table will contain one entry for each process -- currently running on the system. -- -- A backwards mapping is extremely useful since the tables -- in this MIB module are typically indexed with the -- installed application package (sysApplInstallPkgIndex) -- as the primary key, and on down as required by the -- specific table, with the process ID number (sysApplElmtRunIndex) -- being the least significant key. -- -- It is expected that management applications will use -- this mapping table by doing a 'GetNext' operation with -- the known process ID number (sysApplElmtRunIndex) as the partial -- instance identifier. Assuming that there is an entry for -- the process, the result should return a single columnar value, -- the sysApplMapInstallPkgIndex, with the sysApplElmtRunIndex, -- sysApplRunIndex, and sysApplInstallElmtIndex contained in the -- instance identifier for the returned MIB object value. -- -- NOTE: if the process can not be associated back to an -- invoked application installed on the system, then the -- value returned for the columnar value sysApplMapInstallPkgIndex -- will be '0' and the instance portion of the object-identifier -- will be the process ID number (sysApplElmtRunIndex) followed

-- by 0.0.

sysApplMapTable OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF SysApplMapEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The sole purpose of this table is to provide a
       'backwards' mapping so that, given a known
       sysApplElmtRunIndex (process identification number),
       the corresponding invoked application (sysApplRunIndex),
       installed element (sysApplInstallElmtIndex), and
       installed application package (sysApplInstallPkgIndex)
       can be quickly determined.
       This table will contain one entry for each process
       that is currently executing on the system.
       It is expected that management applications will use
       this mapping table by doing a 'GetNext' operation with
       the known process ID number (sysApplElmtRunIndex) as the
       partial instance identifier.  Assuming that there is an
       entry for the process, the result should return a single
       columnar value, the sysApplMapInstallPkgIndex, with the
       sysApplElmtRunIndex, sysApplRunIndex, and
       sysApplInstallElmtIndex contained in the instance identifier
       for the returned MIB object value.
       NOTE: if the process can not be associated back to an
       invoked application installed on the system, then the
       value returned for the columnar value
       sysApplMapInstallPkgIndex will be '0' and the instance
       portion of the object-identifier will be the process ID
       number (sysApplElmtRunIndex) followed by 0.0."
   ::= { sysApplMap 1 }

sysApplMapEntry OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      SysApplMapEntry
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "A logical row representing a process currently running
        on the system.  This entry provides the index mapping from
        process identifier, back to the invoked application,
        installed element, and finally, the installed application
        package.  The entry includes only one accessible columnar
        object, the sysApplMapInstallPkgIndex, but the
        invoked application and installed element can be
        determined from the instance identifier since they form
        part of the index clause."
   INDEX  { sysApplElmtRunIndex, sysApplElmtRunInvocID,
            sysApplMapInstallElmtIndex }
   ::= { sysApplMapTable 1 }

SysApplMapEntry ::= SEQUENCE {

   sysApplMapInstallElmtIndex    Unsigned32,
   sysApplMapInstallPkgIndex     Unsigned32

}

sysApplMapInstallElmtIndex OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The index into the sysApplInstallElmtTable. The
       value of this object is the same value as the
       sysApplInstallElmtIndex for the application element
       of which this entry represents a running instance.
       If this process cannot be associated to an installed
       executable, the value should be '0'."
   ::= { sysApplMapEntry 1 }

sysApplMapInstallPkgIndex OBJECT-TYPE

   SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (0..'ffffffff'h)
   MAX-ACCESS  read-only
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The value of this object identifies the installed
       software package for the application of which this
       process is a part.  Provided that the process's 'parent'
       application can be determined, the value of this object
       is the same value as the sysApplInstallPkgIndex for the
       entry in the sysApplInstallPkgTable that corresponds
       to the installed application of which this process
       is a part.
       If, however, the 'parent' application cannot be
       determined, (for example the process is not part
       of a particular installed application), the value
       for this object is then '0', signifying that this
       process cannot be related back to an application,
       and in turn, an installed software package."
   ::= { sysApplMapEntry 2 }

-- Conformance Macros

sysApplMIBCompliances OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { sysApplConformance 1 } sysApplMIBGroups OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { sysApplConformance 2 }

sysApplMIBCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE

   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "Describes the requirements for conformance to
       the System Application MIB"
   MODULE  -- this module
       MANDATORY-GROUPS { sysApplInstalledGroup,
                          sysApplRunGroup, sysApplMapGroup }
   ::= { sysApplMIBCompliances 1 }

sysApplInstalledGroup OBJECT-GROUP

   OBJECTS { sysApplInstallPkgManufacturer,
             sysApplInstallPkgProductName,
             sysApplInstallPkgVersion,
             sysApplInstallPkgSerialNumber,
             sysApplInstallPkgDate,
             sysApplInstallPkgLocation,
             sysApplInstallElmtName,
             sysApplInstallElmtType,
             sysApplInstallElmtDate,
             sysApplInstallElmtPath,
             sysApplInstallElmtSizeHigh,
             sysApplInstallElmtSizeLow,
             sysApplInstallElmtRole,
             sysApplInstallElmtModifyDate,
             sysApplInstallElmtCurSizeHigh,
             sysApplInstallElmtCurSizeLow }
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The system application installed group contains
       information about applications and their constituent
       components which have been installed on the host system."
   ::= { sysApplMIBGroups 1 }

sysApplRunGroup OBJECT-GROUP

   OBJECTS { sysApplRunStarted,
             sysApplRunCurrentState,
             sysApplPastRunStarted,
             sysApplPastRunExitState,
             sysApplPastRunTimeEnded,
             sysApplElmtRunInstallID,
             sysApplElmtRunTimeStarted,
             sysApplElmtRunState,
             sysApplElmtRunName,
             sysApplElmtRunParameters,
             sysApplElmtRunCPU,
             sysApplElmtRunMemory,
             sysApplElmtRunNumFiles,
             sysApplElmtRunUser,
             sysApplElmtPastRunInstallID,
             sysApplElmtPastRunTimeStarted,
             sysApplElmtPastRunTimeEnded,
             sysApplElmtPastRunName,
             sysApplElmtPastRunParameters,
             sysApplElmtPastRunCPU,
             sysApplElmtPastRunMemory,
             sysApplElmtPastRunNumFiles,
             sysApplElmtPastRunUser,
             sysApplPastRunMaxRows,
             sysApplPastRunTableRemItems,
             sysApplPastRunTblTimeLimit,
             sysApplElemPastRunMaxRows,
             sysApplElemPastRunTableRemItems,
             sysApplElemPastRunTblTimeLimit,
             sysApplAgentPollInterval }
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The system application run group contains information
       about applications and associated elements which have
       run or are currently running on the host system."
   ::= { sysApplMIBGroups 2 }

sysApplMapGroup OBJECT-GROUP

   OBJECTS { sysApplMapInstallPkgIndex }
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
       "The Map Group contains a single table, sysApplMapTable,
       that provides a backwards mapping for determining the
       invoked application, installed element, and installed
       application package given a known process identification
       number."
= { sysApplMIBGroups 3 }

END

Implementation Issues

This section discusses implementation issues that are important for both an agent developer, and a management application developer or user to understand with regards to this MIB module. Although this section does not attempt to prescribe a particular implementation strategy, it does attempt to recognize some of the real world limitations that could effect an implementation of this MIB module.

Implementation with Polling Agents

Implementations of the System Application MIB on popular operating systems might require some considerable processing power to obtain status information from the managed resources. It might also be difficult to determine when an application or a process starts or finishes. Implementors of this MIB might therefore choose an implementation approach where the agent polls the managed resources at regular intervals. The information retrieved by every poll is used to update a cached version of this MIB maintained inside of the agent. SNMP request are processed based on the information found in this MIB cache.

A scalar sysApplAgentPollInterval is defined to give the manager control over the polling frequency. There is a trade- off between the amount of resources consumed during every poll to update the MIB cache, and the accuracy of the information provided by the System Application MIB agent. A default value of 60 seconds is defined to keep the processing overhead low, while providing usable information for long-lived processes. A manager is expected to adjust this value if more accurate information about short-lived applications or processes is needed, or if the amount of resources consumed by the agent is too high.

sysApplElmtPastRunTable Entry Collisions

The sysApplElmtPastRunTable maintains a history of processes which have previously executed on the host as part of an application. Information is moved from the sysApplElmtRunTable to this PastRun table when the process represented by the entry terminates.

The sysApplElmtPastRunTable is indexed by the tuple, (sysApplElmtPastRunInvocID, sysApplElmtPastRunIndex), where the first part identifies the application invocation of which the process was a part, and the second part identifies the process itself.

Recall that the sysApplElmtRunIndex represents the system's unique identification number assigned to a running process and that this value is mapped to sysApplElmtPastRunIndex when the process

terminates and the entry's information is moved from the sysApplElmtRunTable to the sysApplElmtPastRunTable. Many systems re-use process ID numbers which are no longer assigned to running processes; typically, the process numbers wrap and the next available process number is used.

It is therefore possible for two entries in the sysApplElmtPastRun Table to have the same value for sysApplElmtPastRunIndex. For this reason, entries in the ElmtPastRun table are indexed by the tuple sysApplElmtPastRunInvocID, sysApplElmtPastRunIndex to reduce the chance of a collision by two past run elements with the same sysApplElmtPastRunIndex.

However, it is still possible, though unlikely, for a collision to occur if the following happens:

1) the invoked application (identified by InvocID), has an

    element which runs, terminates, and is moved into the
    sysApplElmtPastRun table (index: InvocID, RunIndex)

2) the numbers used for the system's process identification

    numbering wrap

3) that same invoked application (same InvocID), has another

    element process run, AND that process is assigned the same
    identification number as one of the processes previously run by
    that invoked application (same RunIndex), and finally,

4) that element process terminates and is moved to the

    sysApplElmtPastRun table prior to the old, duplicate (InvocID,
    RunIndex) entry being aged out of the table by settings defined
    for sysApplElmtPastRunMaxRows and
    sysApplElmtPastRunTblTimeLimit.

In the event that a collision occurs, the new entry will replace the old entry.

Security Considerations

In order to implement this MIB, an agent must make certain management information available about various logical and physical entities within a managed system which may be considered sensitive in some network environments.

Therefore, a network administrator may wish to employ instance-level access control, and configure the access mechanism (i.e., community strings in SNMPv1 and SNMPv2C), such that certain instances within this MIB are excluded from particular MIB views.

Acknowledgements

This document was produced by the Application MIB working group. Special acknowledgement is made to:

 Rick Sturm
 Enterprise Management Professional Services, Inc.
 [email protected]
 For hosting the working group mailing list, and for his
 participation in the development of the initial draft.
 Jon Weinstock
 General Instrument Corporation
 [email protected]
 For his participation in the development of the initial drafts
 and for serving as editor for drafts 1 and 2.
 The editor would like to extend special thanks to the
 following working group members for their contributions
 to this effort.
 Harald Alvestrand, George Best, Ian Hanson, Harrie
 Hazewinkel, Carl Kalbfleisch, Bobby Krupczak, Randy
 Presuhn, Jon Saperia, Juergen Schoenwaelder

11. Author's Address

Cheryl Krupczak Empire Technologies, Inc. 541 Tenth Street, NW Suite 169 Atlanta, GA 30318

Phone: 770.384.0184 EMail: [email protected]

Jonathan Saperia BGS Systems Inc. [email protected]

12. References

[1] Information processing systems - Open Systems

    Interconnection - Specification of Abstract Syntax
    Notation One (ASN.1), International Organization for
    Standardization.  International Standard 8824, (December,
    1987).

[2] SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M.,

    and S. Waldbusser, "Structure of Management Information
    for Version 2 of the Simple Network Management Protocol
    (SNMPv2)", RFC 1902, January 1996.

[3] SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M.,

    and S. Waldbusser, "Textual Conventions for Version 2 of
    the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC
    1903, January 1996.

[4] SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M.,

    and S. Waldbusser, "Conformance Statements for Version 2
    of the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC
    1904, January 1996.

[5] SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M.,

    and S. Waldbusser, "Protocol Operations for Version 2 of
    the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC
    1905, January 1996.

[6] SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M.,

    and S. Waldbusser, "Transport Mappings for SNMPv2", RFC
    1906, January 1996.

[7] SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M.,

    and S. Waldbusser, "Management Information Base for
    Version 2 of the Simple Network Management Protocol
    (SNMPv2)", RFC 1907, January 1996.

[8] SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M.,

    and S. Waldbusser, "Coexistence between Version 1 and
    Version 2 of the Internet-standard Network Management
    Framework", RFC 1908, January 1996.

[9] Grillo, P., and S. Waldbusser, "Host Resources MIB", RFC 1514,

    September 1993.

[10] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of Unicode

    and ISO 10646", RFC 2044, October 1996.

[11] Krupczak, C., and S. Waldbusser, "Applicability of Host

    Resources MIB to Application Management", Application MIB
    working group report, October 1995.

12. Full Copyright Statement

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998). All Rights Reserved.

This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than English.

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