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Management Information Base
The DBMS server acts as a MIB Server.
MIB means Management Information Base, which in SNMP terms is a set of information in any system that can be monitored and manipulated for the purposes of system management.
From the standpoint of the monitoring application, the MIB is simply a set of tables in a relational database that can be queried and modified using SQL statements. In actuality, the MIB is an abstraction—it is composed of internal information spread among all the Ingres processes in an installation, including:
The DBMS Server
The archiver
The recovery process
The Name Server
Communications servers
Gateways
Slave processes
The MIB server provides a central point of contact for the monitoring application, and acts as a distributed gateway to the actual MIB data, which in its natural habitat is not relational and does not reside in the same location.
The individual units of data are often referred to as “MIB objects” or “MIB variables” and most often are program variables in the code that runs the managed process.
A MIB object has a two-part name:
The object class
A generic variable type
An object instance
A unique identifier constructed for each actual manifestation of a MIB variable
Each object class also has a set of permissions defined for it that is used by the MIB server to enforce access control. This prevents unauthorized users from “playing” with the system.
Permissions are octal values:
Permission
Octal Value
Description
MO_PERM_NONE
0000000
none
MO_SES_READ
0000002
read by session
MO_SES_WRITE
0000004
write by session
MO_DBA_READ
0000020
read by DBA
MO_DBA_WRITE
0000040
write by DBA
MO_SERVER_READ
0000200
read by server administrator
MO_SERVER_WRITE
0000400
write by server administrator
MO_SYSTEM_READ
0002000
read by system administrator
MO_SYSTEM_WRITE
0004000
write by system administrator
MO_SECURITY_READ
0020000
read by security officer
MO_SECURITY_WRITE
0040000
write by security officer
MO_ANY_READ
0200000
override read perm bits
MO_ANY_WRITE
0400000
override write perm bits
For example:
The class ID “exp.gcf.gca.trace_level” has a permission value of 28086, which is a decimal value. The octal value is 66666, which is:
MO_SES_READ + MO_SES_WRITE + MO_DBA_READ + MO_DBA_WRITE +
MO_SERVER_READ + MO_SERVER_WRITE + MO_SYSTEM_READ +
MO_SYSTEM_WRITE + MO_SECURITY_READ + MO_SECURITY_WRITE
The class ID “exp.gwf.gwm.session.control.add_vnode” has a permission value of 6, which is a decimal value. The octal value is 6, which is:
MO_SES_READ + MO_SES_WRITE
Last modified date: 01/30/2023