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<rfc category="std" ipr="pre5378Trust200902" docName="draft-ietf-isms-dtls-tm-12.txt">
    <front>
    <title abbrev="TLS Transport Model for SNMP">
      Transport Layer Security (TLS) Transport Model for the Simple
      Network Management Protocol (SNMP)
    </title>
    <author initials="W.H." surname="Hardaker" fullname="Wes Hardaker">
      <organization>Sparta, Inc.</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>P.O. Box 382</street>
          <city>Davis</city>
          <region>CA</region>
          <code>95617</code>
          <country>USA</country>
        </postal>
        <phone>+1 530 792 1913</phone>
        <email>ietf@hardakers.net</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <date month="May" year="2010"/>
    <area>Security</area>
    <workgroup>ISMS</workgroup>
    <keyword>Network Management</keyword>
    <keyword>Management Information Base</keyword>
    <keyword>MIB</keyword>
    <keyword>SMIv2</keyword>
    <keyword>TLS</keyword>
    <keyword>DTLS</keyword>
    <keyword>SNMP</keyword>
    <abstract>
      <t>
        This document describes a Transport Model for the Simple
        Network Management Protocol (SNMP), that uses either the
        Transport Layer Security protocol or the Datagram Transport
        Layer Security (DTLS) protocol.  The TLS and DTLS protocols
        provide authentication and privacy services for SNMP
        applications.  This document describes how the TLS Transport
        Model (TLSTM) implements the needed features of a SNMP
        Transport Subsystem to make this protection possible in an
        interoperable way.
      </t>
      <t>
        This transport model is designed to meet the security and
        operational needs of network administrators.  It supports
        sending of SNMP messages over TLS/TCP and DTLS/UDP.  The TLS
        mode can make use of TCP's improved support for larger packet
        sizes and the DTLS mode provides potentially superior
        operation in environments where a connectionless (e.g. UDP)
        transport is preferred.  Both TLS and DTLS integrate well into
        existing public keying infrastructures.
      </t>
      <t>
        This document also defines a portion of the Management
        Information Base (MIB) for use with network management
        protocols.  In particular it defines objects for managing the
        TLS Transport Model for SNMP.
      </t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <middle>
    <section title="Introduction">
      <t>
        <!-- Begin text copied from 5591 -->
        It is important to understand the modular SNMPv3 architecture
        as defined by <xref target="RFC3411" /> and enhanced by the
        Transport Subsystem <xref target="RFC5590" />.
        <!-- End text copied from 5591 -->
        It is also important to understand the terminology of the
        SNMPv3 architecture in order to understand where the Transport
        Model described in this document fits into the architecture
        and how it interacts with the other architecture subsystems.
        <!-- Begin Network Management Boiler Text -->
        For a detailed overview of the documents that describe the
        current Internet-Standard Management Framework, please refer
        to Section 7 of <xref target="RFC3410" />.
        <!-- End Network Management Boiler Text -->
      </t>
      <t>
        This document describes a Transport Model that makes use of
        the Transport Layer Security (TLS) <xref target="RFC5246" />
        and the Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) Protocol
        <xref target="RFC4347" />, within a transport subsystem <xref
        target="RFC5590" />.  DTLS is the datagram variant of the
        Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol <xref target="RFC5246"
        />.  The Transport Model in this document is referred to as
        the Transport Layer Security Transport Model (TLSTM).  TLS and
        DTLS take advantage of the X.509 public keying infrastructure
        <xref target="RFC5280" />.  While (D)TLS supports multiple
        authentication mechanisms, this document only discusses X.509
        certificate based authentication.  Although other forms of
        authentication are possible they are outside the scope of this
        specification.  This transport model is designed to meet the
        security and operational needs of network administrators,
        operating in both environments where a connectionless
        (e.g. UDP) transport is preferred and in environments where
        large quantities of data need to be sent (e.g. over a TCP
        based stream).  Both TLS and DTLS integrate well into existing
        public keying infrastructures.  This document supports sending
        of SNMP messages over TLS/TCP and DTLS/UDP.
      </t>
      <t>
        This document also defines a portion of the Management
        Information Base (MIB) for use with network management
        protocols.  In particular it defines objects for managing the
        TLS Transport Model for SNMP.
      </t>
      <t>
        Managed objects are accessed via a virtual information store,
        termed the Management Information Base or MIB.  MIB objects
        are generally accessed through the Simple Network Management
        Protocol (SNMP).  Objects in the MIB are defined using the
        mechanisms defined in the Structure of Management Information
        (SMI).  This memo specifies a MIB module that is compliant to
        the SMIv2, which is described in STD 58: <xref
        target="RFC2578"/>, <xref target="RFC2579"/> and <xref
        target="RFC2580"/>.
      </t>
      <t>
        The diagram shown below gives a conceptual overview of two
        SNMP entities communicating using the TLS Transport Model
        (shown as "TLS TM").  One entity contains a command
        responder and notification originator application, and the
        other a command generator and notification receiver
        application.  It should be understood that this particular mix
        of application types is an example only and other combinations
        are equally valid.  Note: this diagram shows the Transport
        Security Model (TSM) being used as the security model which is
        defined in <xref target="RFC5591" />.
      </t>
      <t>
        <figure>
          <artwork>
 +---------------------------------------------------------------------+
 |                              Network                                |
 +---------------------------------------------------------------------+
     ^                     |            ^               |
     |Notifications        |Commands    |Commands       |Notifications
 +---|---------------------|-------+ +--|---------------|--------------+
 |   |                     V       | |  |               V              |
 | +------------+  +------------+  | | +-----------+   +----------+    |
 | |  (D)TLS    |  |  (D)TLS    |  | | | (D)TLS    |   | (D)TLS   |    |
 | |  (Client)  |  |  (Server)  |  | | | (Client)  |   | (Server) |    |
 | +------------+  +------------+  | | +-----------+   +----------+    |
 |       ^             ^           | |       ^              ^          |
 |       |             |           | |       |              |          |
 |       +-------------+           | |       +--------------+          |
 | +-----|------------+            | | +-----|------------+            |
 | |     V            |            | | |     V            |            |
 | | +--------+       |   +-----+  | | | +--------+       |   +-----+  |
 | | | TLS TM |&lt;---------&gt;|Cache|  | | | | TLS TM |&lt;---------&gt;|Cache|  |
 | | +--------+       |   +-----+  | | | +--------+       |   +-----+  |
 | |Transport Subsys. |      ^     | | |Transport Subsys. |      ^     |
 | +------------------+      |     | | +------------------+      |     |
 |    ^                      |     | |    ^                      |     |
 |    |                      +--+  | |    |                      +--+  |
 |    v                         |  | |    V                         |  |
 | +-----+ +--------+ +-------+ |  | | +-----+ +--------+ +-------+ |  |
 | |     | |Message | |Securi.| |  | | |     | |Message | |Securi.| |  |
 | |Disp.| |Proc.   | |Subsys.| |  | | |Disp.| |Proc.   | |Subsys.| |  |
 | |     | |Subsys. | |       | |  | | |     | |Subsys. | |       | |  |
 | |     | |        | |       | |  | | |     | |        | |       | |  |
 | |     | | +----+ | | +---+ | |  | | |     | | +----+ | | +---+ | |  |
 | |    &lt;---&gt;|v3MP|&lt;--&gt; |TSM|&lt;--+  | | |    &lt;---&gt;|v3MP|&lt;---&gt;|TSM|&lt;--+  |
 | |     | | +----+ | | +---+ |    | | |     | | +----+ | | +---+ |    |
 | |     | |        | |       |    | | |     | |        | |       |    |
 | +-----+ +--------+ +-------+    | | +-----+ +--------+ +-------+    |
 |    ^                            | |    ^                            |
 |    |                            | |    |                            |
 |    +-+------------+             | |    +-+----------+               |
 |      |            |             | |      |          |               |
 |      v            v             | |      v          V               |
 | +-------------+ +-------------+ | | +-------------+ +-------------+ |
 | |   COMMAND   | | NOTIFICAT.  | | | |  COMMAND    | | NOTIFICAT.  | |
 | |  RESPONDER  | | ORIGINATOR  | | | | GENERATOR   | | RECEIVER    | |
 | | application | | application | | | | application | | application | |
 | +-------------+ +-------------+ | | +-------------+ +-------------+ |
 |                     SNMP entity | |                     SNMP entity |
 +---------------------------------+ +---------------------------------+
          </artwork>
        </figure>
      </t>
      <section title="Conventions" anchor="conventions">
        <!-- BEGIN Copied From RFC5592 -->
        <t>
          For consistency with SNMP-related specifications, this
          document favors terminology as defined in STD 62, rather
          than favoring terminology that is consistent with non-SNMP
          specifications.  This is consistent with the IESG decision
          to not require the SNMPv3 terminology be modified to match
          the usage of other non-SNMP specifications when SNMPv3 was
          advanced to Full Standard.
        </t>
        
        <t>
          "Authentication" in this document typically refers to the
          English meaning of "serving to prove the authenticity of"
          the message, not data source authentication or peer identity
          authentication.
        </t>
        
        <t>
          The terms "manager" and "agent" are not used in this
          document because, in the <xref target="RFC3411"/>
          architecture, all SNMP entities have the capability of
          acting as manager, agent, or both depending on the SNMP
          application types supported in the implementation.  Where
          distinction is required, the application names of command
          generator, command responder, notification originator,
          notification receiver, and proxy forwarder are used.  See
          "SNMP Applications" <xref target="RFC3413"/> for further
          information.
        </t>
        
        <!-- END Copied From RFC5592 -->
        
        <t>
          Large portions of this document simultaneously refer to both
          TLS and DTLS when discussing TLSTM components that function
          equally with either protocol.  "(D)TLS" is used in these
          places to indicate that the statement applies to either or
          both protocols as appropriate.  When a distinction between
          the protocols is needed they are referred to independently
          through the use of "TLS" or "DTLS".  The Transport Model,
          however, is named "TLS Transport Model" and refers not to
          the TLS or DTLS protocol but to the specification in this
          document, which includes support for both TLS and DTLS.
        </t>

        <t>
          Throughout this document, the terms "client" and "server"
          are used to refer to the two ends of the (D)TLS transport
          connection.  The client actively opens the (D)TLS
          connection, and the server passively listens for the
          incoming (D)TLS connection.  An SNMP entity may act as a
          (D)TLS client or server or both, depending on the SNMP
          applications supported.
        </t>

        <t>
          The User-Based Security Model (USM) <xref
          target="RFC3414"></xref> is a mandatory-to-implement
          Security Model in STD 62.  While (D)TLS and USM frequently
          refer to a user, the terminology preferred in RFC3411 and in
          this memo is "principal".  A principal is the "who" on whose
          behalf services are provided or processing takes place.  A
          principal can be, among other things, an individual acting
          in a particular role; a set of individuals, with each acting
          in a particular role; an application or a set of
          applications, or a combination of these within an
          administrative domain.
        </t>

        <t>
          Throughout this document, the term "session" is used to
          refer to a secure association between two TLS Transport
          Models that permits the transmission of one or more SNMP
          messages within the lifetime of the session.  The (D)TLS
          protocols also have an internal notion of a session and
          although these two concepts of a session are related, when
          the term "session" is used this document is referring to the
          TLSTM's specific session and not directly to the (D)TLS
          protocol's session.
        </t>

        <t>
          The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL",
          "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY",
          and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as
          described in <xref target="RFC2119" />.
        </t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section title="The Transport Layer Security Protocol">
      <t>
        (D)TLS provides authentication, data message integrity, and
        privacy at the transport layer.  (See <xref target="RFC4347" />)
      </t>
      <t>
        The primary goals of the TLS Transport Model are to provide
        privacy, peer identity authentication and data integrity
        between two communicating SNMP entities.  The TLS and DTLS
        protocols provide a secure transport upon which the TLSTM is
        based.  Please refer to <xref target="RFC5246" /> and <xref
        target="RFC4347" /> for complete descriptions of the
        protocols.
      </t>
    </section>
    <section title="How the TLSTM fits into the Transport Subsystem">
      <t>
        A transport model is a component of the Transport Subsystem.
        The TLS Transport Model thus fits between the underlying
        (D)TLS transport layer and the Message Dispatcher <xref
        target="RFC3411" /> component of the SNMP engine.
      </t>
      <t>
        The TLS Transport Model will establish a session between itself and
        the TLS Transport Model of another SNMP engine.  The sending transport
        model passes unencrypted and unauthenticated messages from the
        Dispatcher to (D)TLS to be encrypted and authenticated, and the
        receiving transport model accepts decrypted and
        authenticated/integrity-checked incoming messages from (D)TLS and
        passes them to the Dispatcher.
      </t>
      <t>
        After a TLS Transport Model session is established, SNMP
        messages can conceptually be sent through the session from one
        SNMP message Dispatcher to another SNMP Message Dispatcher.
        If multiple SNMP messages are needed to be passed between two
        SNMP applications they MAY be passed through the same session.
        A TLSTM implementation engine MAY choose to close the session
        to conserve resources.
      </t>
      <t>
        The TLS Transport Model of an SNMP engine will perform the
        translation between (D)TLS-specific security parameters and
        SNMP- specific, model-independent parameters.
      </t>
      <t>
        The diagram below depicts where the TLS Transport Model (shown
        as "(D)TLS TM") fits into the architecture described in
        RFC3411 and the Transport Subsystem:
      </t>
      <t>
        <figure>
          <artwork>
   +------------------------------+
   |    Network                   |
   +------------------------------+
      ^       ^              ^
      |       |              |
      v       v              v
   +-------------------------------------------------------------------+
   | +--------------------------------------------------+              |
   | |  Transport Subsystem                             |  +--------+  |
   | | +-----+ +-----+ +-------+             +-------+  |  |        |  |
   | | | UDP | | SSH | |(D)TLS |    . . .    | other |&lt;---&gt;| Cache  |  |
   | | |     | | TM  | | TM    |             |       |  |  |        |  |
   | | +-----+ +-----+ +-------+             +-------+  |  +--------+  |
   | +--------------------------------------------------+         ^    |
   |              ^                                               |    |
   |              |                                               |    |
   | Dispatcher   v                                               |    |
   | +--------------+ +---------------------+  +----------------+ |    |
   | | Transport    | | Message Processing  |  | Security       | |    |
   | | Dispatch     | | Subsystem           |  | Subsystem      | |    |
   | |              | |     +------------+  |  | +------------+ | |    |
   | |              | |  +-&gt;| v1MP       |&lt;---&gt;| | USM        | | |    |
   | |              | |  |  +------------+  |  | +------------+ | |    |
   | |              | |  |  +------------+  |  | +------------+ | |    |
   | |              | |  +-&gt;| v2cMP      |&lt;---&gt;| | Transport  | | |    |
   | | Message      | |  |  +------------+  |  | | Security   |&lt;--+    |
   | | Dispatch    &lt;----&gt;|  +------------+  |  | | Model      | |      |
   | |              | |  +-&gt;| v3MP       |&lt;---&gt;| +------------+ |      |
   | |              | |  |  +------------+  |  | +------------+ |      |
   | | PDU Dispatch | |  |  +------------+  |  | | Other      | |      |
   | +--------------+ |  +-&gt;| otherMP    |&lt;---&gt;| | Model(s)   | |      |
   |              ^   |     +------------+  |  | +------------+ |      |
   |              |   +---------------------+  +----------------+      |
   |              v                                                    |
   |      +-------+-------------------------+---------------+          |
   |      ^                                 ^               ^          |
   |      |                                 |               |          |
   |      v                                 v               v          |
   | +-------------+   +---------+   +--------------+  +-------------+ |
   | |   COMMAND   |   | ACCESS  |   | NOTIFICATION |  |    PROXY    | |
   | |  RESPONDER  |&lt;-&gt;| CONTROL |&lt;-&gt;|  ORIGINATOR  |  |  FORWARDER  | |
   | | application |   |         |   | applications |  | application | |
   | +-------------+   +---------+   +--------------+  +-------------+ |
   |      ^                                 ^                          |
   |      |                                 |                          |
   |      v                                 v                          |
   | +----------------------------------------------+                  |
   | |             MIB instrumentation              |      SNMP entity |
   +-------------------------------------------------------------------+
          </artwork>
        </figure>
      </t>
      <section title="Security Capabilities of this Model">
        <section title="Threats">
          <t>
            The TLS Transport Model provides protection against the
            threats identified by the RFC 3411 architecture <xref
            target="RFC3411" />:
            <list style="format %d." counter="threats">
              <t>
                Modification of Information - The modification threat
                is the danger that an unauthorized entity may alter
                in-transit SNMP messages generated on behalf of an
                authorized principal in such a way as to effect
                unauthorized management operations, including
                falsifying the value of an object.

                <vspace blankLines='1' />

                (D)TLS provides verification that the content of each
                received message has not been modified during its
                transmission through the network, data has not been
                altered or destroyed in an unauthorized manner, and
                data sequences have not been altered to an extent
                greater than can occur non-maliciously.
              </t>

              <!-- Mostly verbatim copy from RFC3411 -->
              <t>
                Masquerade - The masquerade threat is the danger that
                management operations unauthorized for a given
                principal may be attempted by assuming the identity of
                another principal that has the appropriate
                authorizations.
                <vspace blankLines='1' />

                The TLSTM verifies of the identity of the (D)TLS
                server through the use of the (D)TLS protocol and
                X.509 certificates.  A TLS Transport Model
                implementation MUST support authentication of both the
                server and the client.
              </t>
              <t>
                Message stream modification - The re-ordering, delay
                or replay of messages can and does occur through the
                natural operation of many connectionless transport
                services.  The message stream modification threat is
                the danger that messages may be maliciously
                re-ordered, delayed or replayed to an extent which is
                greater than can occur through the natural operation
                of connectionless transport services, in order to
                effect unauthorized management operations.

                <vspace blankLines='1' />

                (D)TLS provides replay protection with a MAC that
                includes a sequence number.  Since UDP provides no
                sequencing ability, DTLS uses a sliding window
                protocol with the sequence number used for replay
                protection (see <xref target="RFC4347" />).
              </t>
              <t>
                Disclosure - The disclosure threat is the danger of
                eavesdropping on the exchanges between SNMP engines.

                <vspace blankLines='1' />

                (D)TLS provides protection against the disclosure of
                information to unauthorized recipients or
                eavesdroppers by allowing for encryption of all
                traffic between SNMP engines.  A TLS Transport Model
                implementation MUST support message encryption to
                protect sensitive data from eavesdropping attacks.
              </t>
              <t>
                Denial of Service - the RFC 3411 architecture <xref
                target="RFC3411" /> states that denial of service
                (DoS) attacks need not be addressed by an SNMP
                security protocol.  However, connectionless transports
                (like DTLS over UDP) are susceptible to a variety of
                denial of service attacks because they are more
                vulnerable to spoofed IP addresses.  See <xref
                target="dtlsusage" /> for details how the cookie
                mechanism is used.  Note, however, that this mechanism
                does not provide any defense against denial of service
                attacks mounted from valid IP addresses.
              </t>
            </list>
          </t>
          <t>
            See <xref target="securityconsiderations" /> for more
            detail on the security considerations associated with the
            TLSTM and these security threats.
          </t>
        </section>
        <section title="Message Protection" anchor="seclevel">
          <t>
            The RFC 3411 architecture recognizes three levels of security:
            <list style="symbols">
              <t>without authentication and without privacy (noAuthNoPriv)</t>
              <t>with authentication but without privacy (authNoPriv)</t>
              <t>with authentication and with privacy (authPriv)</t>
            </list>
          </t>
          <t>
            The TLS Transport Model determines from (D)TLS the
            identity of the authenticated principal, the transport
            type and the transport address associated with an incoming
            message.  The TLS Transport Model provides the identity
            and destination type and address to (D)TLS for outgoing
            messages.
          </t>
          <t>
            When an application requests a session for a message it
            also requests a security level for that session.  The TLS
            Transport Model MUST ensure that the (D)TLS connection
            provides security at least as high as the requested level
            of security.  How the security level is translated into
            the algorithms used to provide data integrity and privacy
            is implementation-dependent.  However, the NULL integrity
            and encryption algorithms MUST NOT be used to fulfill
            security level requests for authentication or privacy.
            Implementations MAY choose to force (D)TLS to only allow
            cipher_suites that provide both authentication and privacy
            to guarantee this assertion.
          </t>
          <t>
            If a suitable interface between the TLS Transport Model
            and the (D)TLS Handshake Protocol is implemented to allow
            the selection of security level dependent algorithms (for
            example a security level to cipher_suites mapping table)
            then different security levels may be utilized by the
            application.
          </t>
          <t>
            The authentication, integrity and privacy algorithms used
            by the (D)TLS Protocols may vary over time as the science
            of cryptography continues to evolve and the development of
            (D)TLS continues over time.  Implementers are encouraged
            to plan for changes in operator trust of particular
            algorithms.  Implementations SHOULD offer configuration
            settings for mapping algorithms to SNMPv3 security levels.
          </t>
        </section>
        <section title="(D)TLS Connections" anchor="sessions">
          <t>
            (D)TLS connections are opened by the TLS Transport Model
            during the elements of procedure for an outgoing SNMP
            message.  Since the sender of a message initiates the
            creation of a (D)TLS connection if needed, the (D)TLS
            connection will already exist for an incoming message.
          </t>
          <t>
            Implementations MAY choose to instantiate (D)TLS
            connections in anticipation of outgoing messages.  This
            approach might be useful to ensure that a (D)TLS
            connection to a given target can be established before it
            becomes important to send a message over the (D)TLS
            connection.  Of course, there is no guarantee that a
            pre-established session will still be valid when needed.
          </t>
          <t>
            DTLS connections, when used over UDP, are uniquely
            identified within the TLS Transport Model by the
            combination of transportDomain, transportAddress,
            tmSecurityName, and requestedSecurityLevel associated with
            each session.  Each unique combination of these parameters
            MUST have a locally-chosen unique tlstmSessionID for each
            active session.  For further information see <xref
            target="eop" />.  TLS over TCP sessions, on the other
            hand, do not require a unique pairing of address and port
            attributes since their lower layer protocols (TCP) already
            provide adequate session framing.  But they must still
            provide a unique tlstmSessionID for referencing the
            session.
          </t>

          <t>
            The tlstmSessionID identifier MUST NOT change during the
            entire duration of the session from the TLSTM's
            perspective, and MUST uniquely identify a single session.
            As an implementation hint: note that the (D)TLS internal
            SessionID does not meet these requirements, since it can
            change over the life of the connection as seen by the
            TLSTM (for example, during renegotiation), and does not
            necessarily uniquely identify a TLSTM session (there can
            be multiple TLSTM sessions sharing the same D(TLS)
            internal SessionID).
          </t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section title="Security Parameter Passing">
        <t>
          For the (D)TLS server-side, (D)TLS-specific security
          parameters (i.e., cipher_suites, X.509 certificate fields,
          IP address and port) are translated by the TLS Transport
          Model into security parameters for the TLS Transport Model
          and security model (e.g., tmSecurityLevel, tmSecurityName,
          transportDomain, transportAddress).  The transport-related
          and (D)TLS-security-related information, including the
          authenticated identity, are stored in a cache referenced by
          tmStateReference.
        </t>
        <t>
          For the (D)TLS client-side, the TLS Transport Model takes
          input provided by the Dispatcher in the sendMessage()
          Abstract Service Interface (ASI) and input from the
          tmStateReference cache.  The (D)TLS Transport Model converts
          that information into suitable security parameters for
          (D)TLS and establishes sessions as needed.
        </t>
        <t>
          The elements of procedure in <xref target="eop" /> discuss
          these concepts in much greater detail.
</t>
      </section>
      <section title="Notifications and Proxy">
        <t>
          (D)TLS connections may be initiated by (D)TLS clients on
          behalf of SNMP appplications that initiate communications,
          such as command generators, notification originators, proxy
          forwarders.  Command generators are frequently operated by a
          human, but notification originators and proxy forwarders are
          usually unmanned automated processes.  The targets to whom
          notifications and proxied requests should be sent is
          typically determined and configured by a network
          administrator.
        </t>
        <t>
          The SNMP-TARGET-MIB module <xref target="RFC3413" />
          contains objects for defining management targets, including
          transportDomain, transportAddress, securityName,
          securityModel, and securityLevel parameters, for
          notification originator, proxy forwarder, and
          SNMP-controllable command generator applications.  Transport
          domains and transport addresses are configured in the
          snmpTargetAddrTable, and the securityModel, securityName,
          and securityLevel parameters are configured in the
          snmpTargetParamsTable.  This document defines a MIB module
          that extends the SNMP-TARGET-MIB's snmpTargetParamsTable to
          specify a (D)TLS client-side certificate to use for the
          connection.
        </t>
        <t>
          When configuring a (D)TLS target, the snmpTargetAddrTDomain
          and snmpTargetAddrTAddress parameters in snmpTargetAddrTable
          SHOULD be set to the snmpTLSTCPDomain or snmpDTLSUDPDomain
          object and an appropriate snmpTLSAddress value.  When used
          with the SNMPv3 message processing model, the
          snmpTargetParamsMPModel column of the snmpTargetParamsTable
          SHOULD be set to a value of 3.  The
          snmpTargetParamsSecurityName SHOULD be set to an appropriate
          securityName value and the snmpTlstmParamsClientFingerprint
          parameter of the snmpTlstmParamsTable SHOULD be set a value
          that refers to a locally held certificate (and the
          corresponding private key) to be used.  Other parameters,
          for example cryptographic configuration such as which cipher
          suites to use, must come from configuration mechanisms not
          defined in this document.
</t>
        <t>
          The securityName defined in the snmpTargetParamsSecurityName
          column will be used by the access control model to authorize
          any notifications that need to be sent.
        </t>
      </section>
    </section>

    <section title="Elements of the Model">
      <t>
        This section contains definitions required to realize the
        (D)TLS Transport Model defined by this document.
      </t>
      <section title="X.509 Certificates">
        <t>
          (D)TLS can make use of X.509 certificates for authentication
          of both sides of the transport.  This section discusses the
          use of X.509 certificates in the TLSTM.
        </t>
        <t>
          While (D)TLS supports multiple authentication mechanisms,
          this document only discusses X.509 certificate based
          authentication; other forms of authentication are
          outside the scope of this specification.  TLSTM
          implementations are REQUIRED to support X.509 certificates.
        </t>
        <section title="Provisioning for the Certificate" anchor="provisioning">
          <t>
            Authentication using (D)TLS will require that SNMP
            entities have certificates, either signed by trusted
            certification authorities, or self-signed.  Furthermore,
            SNMP entities will most commonly need to be provisioned
            with root certificates which represent the list of trusted
            certificate authorities that an SNMP entity can use for
            certificate verification.  SNMP entities SHOULD also be
            provisioned with a X.509 certificate revocation mechanism
            which can be used to verify that a certificate has not
            been revoked.  Trusted public keys from either CA
            certificates and/or self-signed certificates MUST be
            installed into the server through a trusted out of band
            mechanism and their authenticity MUST be verified before
            access is granted.
          </t>
          <t>
            Having received a certificate from a connecting TLSTM
            client, the authenticated tmSecurityName of the principal
            is derived using the snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable.  This table
            allows mapping of incoming connections to tmSecurityNames
            through defined transformations.  The transformations
            defined in the SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB include:
            <list style="symbols">
              <t>
                Mapping a certificate's subjectAltName or CommonName
                components to a tmSecurityName, or
              </t>
              <t>
                Mapping a certificate's fingerprint value to a
                directly specified tmSecurityName
              </t>
            </list>
          </t>
          <t>
            As an implementation hint: implementations may choose to
            discard any connections for which no potential
            snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable mapping exists before performing
            certificate verification to avoid expending computational
            resources associated with certificate verification.
          </t>
          <t>
            Deployments SHOULD map the "subjectAltName" component of
            X.509 certificates to the TLSTM specific tmSecurityNames.
            The authenticated identity can be obtained by the TLS
            Transport Model by extracting the subjectAltName(s) from
            the peer's certificate.  The receiving application will
            then have an appropriate tmSecurityName for use by other
            SNMPv3 components like an access control model.
          </t>
          <t>
            An example of this type of mapping setup can be found in
            <xref target="examples" />.
          </t>
          <t>
            This tmSecurityName may be later translated from a TLSTM
            specific tmSecurityName to a SNMP engine securityName by
            the security model.  A security model, like the TSM
            security model <xref target="RFC5591" />, may perform an
            identity mapping or a more complex mapping to derive the
            securityName from the tmSecurityName offered by the TLS
            Transport Model.
          </t>
          <t>
            The standard VACM access control model constrains
            securityNames to be 32 octets or less in length. A TLSTM
            generated tmSecurityName, possibly in combination with a
            messaging or security model that increases the length of
            the securityName, might cause the securityName length to
            exceed 32 octets. For example, a 32 octet tmSecurityName
            derived from an IPv6 address, paired with a TSM prefix,
            will generate a 36 octet securityName. Such a securityName
            will not be able to be used with standard VACM or TARGET
            MIB modules. Operators should be careful to select
            algorithms and subjectAltNames to avoid this situation.
          </t>
          <t>
            A pictorial view of the complete transformation process
            (using the TSM security model for the example) is shown
            below:
            <figure>
              <artwork>
 +-------------+     +-------+                   +-----+
 | Certificate |     |       |                   |     |
 |    Path     |     | TLSTM |  tmSecurityName   | TSM |
 | Validation  | --&gt; |       | -----------------&gt;|     |
 +-------------+     +-------+                   +-----+
                                                     |
                                                     | securityName
                                                     V
                                                 +-------------+
                                                 | application |
                                                 +-------------+
              </artwork>
            </figure>
          </t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section title="(D)TLS Usage" anchor="dtlsusage">
        <t>
          (D)TLS MUST negotiate a cipher suite that uses X.509
          certificates for authentication, and MUST authenticate both
          the client and the server.  The mandatory-to-implement
          cipher suite is specified in the TLS specification <xref
          target="RFC5246" />.
        </t>
        <t>
          TLSTM verifies the certificates when the connection is
          opened (see Section 5.3).  For this reason, TLS
          renegotiation with different certificates MUST NOT be done.
          That is, implementations MUST either disable renegotiation
          completely (RECOMMENDED), or MUST present the same
          certificate during renegotiation (and MUST verify that the
          other end presented the same certificate).
        </t>
        <t>
          For DTLS over UDP, each SNMP message MUST be placed in a
          single UDP datagram; it MAY be split to multiple DTLS
          records.  In other words, if a single datagram contains
          multiple DTLS application_data records, they are
          concatenated when received.  The TLSTM implementation SHOULD
          return an error if the SNMP message does not fit in the UDP
          datagram, and thus cannot be sent.
        </t>
        <t>
          For DTLS over UDP, the DTLS server implementation MUST
          support DTLS cookies (<xref target="RFC4347" /> already
          requires that clients support DTLS cookies).
          Implementations are not required to perform the cookie
          exchange for every DTLS handshake; however, enabling it by
          default is RECOMMENDED.
        </t>
        <t>
          For DTLS, replay protection MUST be used.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section title="SNMP Services ">
        <t>
          This section describes the services provided by the TLS
          Transport Model with their inputs and outputs.  The services
          are between the Transport Model and the Dispatcher.
        </t>
        <t>
          The services are described as primitives of an abstract
          service interface (ASI) and the inputs and outputs are
          described as abstract data elements as they are passed in
          these abstract service primitives.
        </t>
        <section title="SNMP Services for an Outgoing Message">
          <t>
            The Dispatcher passes the information to the TLS Transport
            Model using the ASI defined in the transport subsystem:
            <figure>
              <artwork>
   statusInformation =
   sendMessage(
   IN   destTransportDomain           -- transport domain to be used
   IN   destTransportAddress          -- transport address to be used
   IN   outgoingMessage               -- the message to send
   IN   outgoingMessageLength         -- its length
   IN   tmStateReference              -- reference to transport state
    )
              </artwork>
            </figure>
          </t>
          <t>
            The abstract data elements returned from or passed as
            parameters into the abstract service primitives are as
            follows:
            <list style="hanging">
              <t hangText="statusInformation:">
                An indication of whether the sending of the message
                was successful.  If not, it is an indication of the
                problem.
              </t>
              <t hangText="destTransportDomain:">
                The transport domain for the associated
                destTransportAddress.  The Transport Model uses this
                parameter to determine the transport type of the
                associated destTransportAddress.  This document
                specifies the snmpTLSTCPDomain and the
                snmpDTLSUDPDomain transport domains.
              </t>
              <t hangText="destTransportAddress:">
                The transport address of the destination TLS Transport
                Model in a format specified by the SnmpTLSAddress
                TEXTUAL-CONVENTION.

</t>
              <t hangText="outgoingMessage:">
                The outgoing message to send to (D)TLS for
                encapsulation and transmission.
              </t>
              <t hangText="outgoingMessageLength:">
                The length of the outgoingMessage.
              </t>
              <t hangText="tmStateReference:">
                A reference used to pass model-specific and
                mechanism-specific parameters between the Transport
                Subsystem and transport-aware Security Models.
              </t>
            </list>
          </t>
        </section>
        <section title="SNMP Services for an Incoming Message">
          <t>
            The TLS Transport Model processes the received message
            from the network using the (D)TLS service and then passes
            it to the Dispatcher using the following ASI:
          </t>
          <t>
            <figure>
              <artwork>
   statusInformation =
   receiveMessage(
   IN   transportDomain               -- origin transport domain
   IN   transportAddress              -- origin transport address
   IN   incomingMessage               -- the message received
   IN   incomingMessageLength         -- its length
   IN   tmStateReference              -- reference to transport state
    )
              </artwork>
            </figure>
          </t>
          <t>
            The abstract data elements returned from or passed as
            parameters into the abstract service primitives are as
            follows:
            <list style="hanging">
              <t hangText="statusInformation:">
                An indication of whether the passing of the message
                was successful.  If not, it is an indication of the
                problem.
              </t>
              <t hangText="transportDomain:">
                The transport domain for the associated
                transportAddress.  This document specifies the
                snmpTLSTCPDomain and the snmpDTLSUDPDomain transport
                domains.
              </t>
              <t hangText="transportAddress:">
                The transport address of the source of the received
                message in a format specified by the SnmpTLSAddress
                TEXTUAL-CONVENTION.
              </t>
              <t hangText="incomingMessage:">
                The whole SNMP message after being processed by (D)TLS.
              </t>
              <t hangText="incomingMessageLength:">
                The length of the incomingMessage.
              </t>
              <t hangText="tmStateReference:">
                A reference used to pass model-specific and
                mechanism-specific parameters between the Transport
                Subsystem and transport-aware Security Models.
              </t>
            </list>
          </t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <!-- Begin boiler plate from RFC5592 -->
      <section title="Cached Information and References">
        <t>
          When performing SNMP processing, there are two levels of
          state information that may need to be retained: the
          immediate state linking a request-response pair, and
          potentially longer-term state relating to transport and
          security.  <xref target="RFC5590">"Transport Subsystem for
          the Simple Network Management Protocol" </xref> defines
          general requirements for caches and references.
        </t>
        <!-- End boiler plate from RFC5592 -->

        <section title="TLS Transport Model Cached Information">
          
          <!-- BEGIN text matching RFC5592 -->
          <t>
            The TLS Transport Model has specific responsibilities
            regarding the cached information.  See the Elements of
            Procedure in <xref target="eop" /> for detailed processing
            instructions on the use of the tmStateReference fields by
            the TLS Transport Model.
          </t>
          
          <section title="tmSecurityName">
            <t>
              The tmSecurityName MUST be a human-readable name (in
              snmpAdminString format) representing the identity that
              has been set according to the procedures in <xref
              target="eop" />.  The tmSecurityName MUST be constant
              for all traffic passing through a single TLSTM session.
              Messages MUST NOT be sent through an existing (D)TLS
              connection that was established using a different
              tmSecurityName.
            </t>
            
            <t>
              On the (D)TLS server side of a connection the
              tmSecurityName is derived using the procedures described
              in <xref target="establishserver" /> and the SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB's
              snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable DESCRIPTION clause.
            </t>
            
            <t>
              On the (D)TLS client side of a connection the
              tmSecurityName is presented to the TLS Transport Model
              by the application (possibly because of configuration
              specified in the SNMP-TARGET-MIB).
            </t>
            
            <t>
              Transport-model-aware security models derive
              tmSecurityName from a securityName, possibly configured
              in MIB modules for notifications and access controls.
              Transport Models SHOULD use predictable tmSecurityNames
              so operators will know what to use when configuring MIB
              modules that use securityNames derived from
              tmSecurityNames.  The TLSTM generates predictable
              tmSecurityNames based on the configuration found in the
              SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB's snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable and relies on
              the network operators to have configured this table
              appropriately.
            </t>
          </section>
          <section title="tmSessionID">
            <t>
              The tmSessionID MUST be recorded per message at the time
              of receipt.  When tmSameSecurity is set, the recorded
              tmSessionID can be used to determine whether the (D)TLS
              connection available for sending a corresponding
              outgoing message is the same (D)TLS connection as was
              used when receiving the incoming message (e.g., a
              response to a request).
            </t>
          </section>
          <section title="Session State">
            <t>
              The per-session state that is referenced by
              tmStateReference may be saved across multiple messages
              in a Local Configuration Datastore.  Additional
              session/connection state information might also be
              stored in a Local Configuration Datastore.
            </t>
          </section>
          <!-- END text matching RFC5592 -->
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section title="Elements of Procedure" anchor="eop">
      <t>
        <!-- BEGIN text copied from RFC5592 -->

        Abstract service interfaces have been defined by <xref
        target="RFC3411" /> and further augmented by <xref
        target="RFC5590" /> to describe the conceptual data flows
        between the various subsystems within an SNMP entity.  The
        TLSTM uses some of these conceptual data flows when
        communicating between subsystems.
      </t>
      <t>
        To simplify the elements of procedure, the release of state
        information is not always explicitly specified.  As a general rule, if
        state information is available when a message gets discarded, the
        message-state information should also be released.  If state
        information is available when a session is closed, the session state
        information should also be released.

        <!-- BEGIN added beyond what RFC5592 had in it: -->
        Sensitive information, like cryptographic keys, should be
        overwritten appropriately prior to being released.
        <!-- END added beyond what RFC5592 had in it: -->
      </t>
      <t>
        An error indication in statusInformation will typically
        include the Object Identifier (OID) and value for an
        incremented error counter.  This may be accompanied by the
        requested securityLevel and the tmStateReference.  Per-message
        context information is not accessible to Transport Models, so
        for the returned counter OID and value, contextEngine would be
        set to the local value of snmpEngineID and contextName to the
        default context for error counters.
      </t>
      <!-- END text copied from RFC5592 -->
      <section title="Procedures for an Incoming Message">
        <t>
          This section describes the procedures followed by the (D)TLS
          Transport Model when it receives a (D)TLS protected packet.  The
          required functionality is broken into two different sections.
        </t>
        <t>
          <xref target="dtlsprocessing" /> describes the processing
          required for de-multiplexing multiple DTLS connections,
          which is specifically needed for DTLS over UDP sessions.  It
          is assumed that TLS protocol implementations already provide
          appropriate message demultiplexing.
        </t>

        <t>
          <xref target="snmpinprocessing" /> describes the transport
          processing required once the (D)TLS processing has been
          completed.  This will be needed for all (D)TLS-based
          connections.
        </t>
        <section title="DTLS over UDP Processing for Incoming Messages"
          anchor="dtlsprocessing">
          <t>
            For connection-oriented transport protocols, such as TCP,
            the transport protocol takes care of demultiplexing
            incoming packets to the right connection. Depending on the
            DTLS implementation, for DTLS over UDP, this
            demultiplexing may need to be done by the TLSTM
            implementation.
          </t>
          <t>
            Like TCP, DTLS over UDP uses the four-tuple &lt;source IP,
            destination IP, source port, destination port&gt; for
            identifying the connection (and relevant DTLS connection
            state). This means that when establishing a new session,
            implementations MUST use a different UDP source port
            number for each active connection to a remote destination
            IP-address/port-number combination to ensure the remote
            entity can disambiguate between multiple connections.
          </t>
          <t>
            If demultiplexing received UDP datagrams to DTLS
            connection state is done by the TLSTM implementation
            (instead of the DTLS implementation), the steps below
            describe one possible method to accomplish this.
          </t>
          <t>
            The important output results from the steps in this
            process are the remote transport address, incomingMessage,
            incomingMessageLength, and the tlstmSessionID.
          </t>
          <t>
            <list style="format %d)">
              <t>
                The TLS Transport Model examines the raw UDP message,
                in an implementation-dependent manner.
              </t>
              <t>
                The TLS Transport Model queries the Local
                Configuration Datastore (LCD) (see <xref
                target="RFC3411" /> Section 3.4.2) using the transport
                parameters (source and destination IP addresses and
                ports) to determine if a session already exists.
                <list style="format 2%c)">
                  <t>
                    If a matching entry in the LCD does not exist,
                    then the UDP packet is passed to the DTLS
                    implementation for processing.  If the DTLS
                    implementation decides to continue with the
                    connection and allocate state for it, it returns a
                    new DTLS connection handle (an implementation
                    dependent detail). In this case, TLSTM selects a
                    new tlstmSessionId, and caches this and the DTLS
                    connection handle as a new entry in the LCD
                    (indexed by the transport parameters).  If the
                    DTLS implementation returns an error or does not
                    allocate connection state (which can happen with
                    the stateless cookie exchange), processing stops.
                  </t>
                  <t>
                    If a session does exist in the LCD then its DTLS
                    connection handle (an implementation dependent
                    detail) and its tlstmSessionId is extracted from
                    the LCD.  The UDP packet and the connection handle
                    is passed to the DTLS implementation.  If the DTLS
                    implementation returns success but does not return
                    an incomingMessage and an incomingMessageLength
                    then processing stops (this is the case when the
                    UDP datagram contained DTLS handshake messages,
                    for example).  If the DTLS implementation returns
                    an error then processing stops.
                  </t>
                </list>
              </t>
              <t>
                Retrieve the incomingMessage and an
                incomingMessageLength from DTLS.  These results and
                the tlstmSessionID are used below in <xref
                target="snmpinprocessing" /> to complete the
                processing of the incoming message.
              </t>
            </list>
          </t>
        </section>
        <section title="Transport Processing for Incoming SNMP Messages"
          anchor="snmpinprocessing">
          <t>
            The procedures in this section describe how the TLS
            Transport Model should process messages that have already
            been properly extracted from the (D)TLS stream.  Note that
            care must be taken when processing messages originating
            from either TLS or DTLS to ensure they're complete and
            single.  For example, multiple SNMP messages can be passed
            through a single DTLS message and partial SNMP messages
            may be received from a TLS stream.  These steps describe
            the processing of a singular SNMP message after it has
            been delivered from the (D)TLS stream.
            <list style="format %d)">
              <t>
                Determine the tlstmSessionID for the incoming message.
                The tlstmSessionID MUST be a unique session identifier
                for this (D)TLS connection.  The contents and format
                of this identifier are implementation-dependent as
                long as it is unique to the session.  A session
                identifier MUST NOT be reused until all references to
                it are no longer in use.  The tmSessionID is equal to
                the tlstmSessionID discussed in <xref
                target="dtlsprocessing" />.  tmSessionID refers to the
                session identifier when stored in the tmStateReference
                and tlstmSessionID refers to the session identifier
                when stored in the LCD.  They MUST always be equal
                when processing a given session's traffic.

                <vspace blankLines='1' />

                If this is the first message received through this
                session and the session does not have an assigned
                tlstmSessionID yet then the snmpTlstmSessionAccepts
                counter is incremented and a tlstmSessionID for the
                session is created.  This will only happen on the
                server side of a connection because a client would
                have already assigned a tlstmSessionID during the
                openSession() invocation.  Implementations may have
                performed the procedures described in <xref
                target="establishserver" /> prior to this point or
                they may perform them now, but the procedures
                described in <xref target="establishserver" /> MUST be
                performed before continuing beyond this point.
              </t>
              <t>
                Create a tmStateReference cache for the subsequent reference and
                assign the following values within it:
                <list style="hanging">
                  <t hangText="tmTransportDomain">
                    = snmpTLSTCPDomain or snmpDTLSUDPDomain as
                    appropriate.
                  </t>
                  <t hangText="tmTransportAddress">
                    = The address the message originated from.
                  </t>
                  <t hangText="tmSecurityLevel">
                    = The derived tmSecurityLevel for the session, as
                    discussed in <xref target="seclevel" /> and <xref
                    target="establishsession" />.
                  </t>
                  <t hangText="tmSecurityName">
                    = The derived tmSecurityName for the session as
                    discussed in <xref target="establishsession" />.
                    This value MUST be constant during the lifetime of
                    the session.
                  </t>
                  <t hangText="tmSessionID">
                    = The tlstmSessionID described in step 1 above.
                  </t>
                </list>
              </t>
              <t>
                The incomingMessage and incomingMessageLength are
                assigned values from the (D)TLS processing.
              </t>
              <t>
                The TLS Transport Model passes the transportDomain,
                transportAddress, incomingMessage, and
                incomingMessageLength to the Dispatcher using the
                receiveMessage ASI:
                <figure>
                  <artwork><![CDATA[
    statusInformation =
    receiveMessage(
    IN   transportDomain     -- snmpTLSTCPDomain or snmpDTLSUDPDomain,
    IN   transportAddress    -- address for the received message
    IN   incomingMessage        -- the whole SNMP message from (D)TLS
    IN   incomingMessageLength  -- the length of the SNMP message    
    IN   tmStateReference    -- transport info          
     )
 ]]>
                  </artwork>
                </figure>
              </t>
            </list>
          </t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section title="Procedures for an Outgoing SNMP Message">
        <t>
          The Dispatcher sends a message to the TLS Transport Model
          using the following ASI:
          <figure>
            <artwork><![CDATA[
    statusInformation =
    sendMessage(
    IN   destTransportDomain           -- transport domain to be used
    IN   destTransportAddress          -- transport address to be used
    IN   outgoingMessage               -- the message to send
    IN   outgoingMessageLength         -- its length    
    IN   tmStateReference              -- transport info           
    )
              ]]></artwork>
          </figure>
        </t>
        <t>
          This section describes the procedure followed by the TLS
          Transport Model whenever it is requested through this ASI to
          send a message.
          <list style="format %d)">
            <t>
              If tmStateReference does not refer to a cache containing
              values for tmTransportDomain, tmTransportAddress,
              tmSecurityName, tmRequestedSecurityLevel, and
              tmSameSecurity, then increment the
              snmpTlstmSessionInvalidCaches counter, discard the
              message, and return the error indication in the
              statusInformation.  Processing of this message stops.
            </t>
            <t>
              Extract the tmSessionID, tmTransportDomain,
              tmTransportAddress, tmSecurityName,
              tmRequestedSecurityLevel, and tmSameSecurity values from
              the tmStateReference.  Note: The tmSessionID value may
              be undefined if no session exists yet over which the
              message can be sent.
            </t>
            <t>
              If tmSameSecurity is true and either tmSessionID is
              undefined or refers to a session that is no longer open
              then increment the snmpTlstmSessionNoSessions counter,
              discard the message and return the error indication in
              the statusInformation.  Processing of this message
              stops.
            </t>
            <t>
              If tmSameSecurity is false and tmSessionID refers to a
              session that is no longer available then an
              implementation SHOULD open a new session using the
              openSession() ASI (described in greater detail in step
              5b).  Instead of opening a new session an implementation
              MAY return a snmpTlstmSessionNoSessions error to the
              calling module and stop processing of the message.
            </t>
            <t>
              If tmSessionID is undefined, then use tmTransportDomain,
              tmTransportAddress, tmSecurityName and
              tmRequestedSecurityLevel to see if there is a
              corresponding entry in the LCD suitable to send the
              message over.
              <list style="format 5%c)" counter="step4">
                <t>
                  If there is a corresponding LCD entry, then this
                  session will be used to send the message.
                </t>
                <t>
                  If there is no corresponding LCD entry, then open a
                  session using the openSession() ASI (discussed
                  further in <xref target="establishclient" />).
                  Implementations MAY wish to offer message buffering
                  to prevent redundant openSession() calls for the
                  same cache entry.  If an error is returned from
                  openSession(), then discard the message, discard the
                  tmStateReference, increment the
                  snmpTlstmSessionOpenErrors, return an error
                  indication to the calling module and stop processing
                  of the message.
                </t>
              </list>
            </t>
            <t>
              Using either the session indicated by the tmSessionID if
              there was one or the session resulting from a previous
              step (4 or 5), pass the outgoingMessage to (D)TLS for
              encapsulation and transmission.
            </t>
          </list>
        </t>
      </section>
      <section title="Establishing or Accepting a Session"
        anchor="establishsession">
        <t>
          Establishing a (D)TLS connection as either a client or a
          server requires slightly different processing.  The
          following two sections describe the necessary processing
          steps.
        </t>
        <section title="Establishing a Session as a Client"
          anchor="establishclient">
          <t>
            The TLS Transport Model provides the following primitive
            for use by a client to establish a new (D)TLS connection:
          </t>
          <t>
            <figure>
              <artwork>
statusInformation =           -- errorIndication or success
openSession(
IN   tmStateReference         -- transport information to be used
OUT  tmStateReference         -- transport information to be used
IN   maxMessageSize           -- of the sending SNMP entity
)
              </artwork>
            </figure>
          </t>
          <t>
            The following describes the procedure to follow when
            establishing a SNMP over (D)TLS connection between SNMP
            engines for exchanging SNMP messages.  This process is
            followed by any SNMP client's engine when establishing a
            session for subsequent use.
          </t>
          <t>
            This procedure MAY be done automatically for an SNMP
            application that initiates a transaction, such as a
            command generator, a notification originator, or a proxy
            forwarder.
            <list style="format %d)">
              <t>
                The snmpTlstmSessionOpens counter is incremented.
              </t>
              
              <t>
                The client selects the appropriate certificate and
                cipher_suites for the key agreement based on the
                tmSecurityName and the tmRequestedSecurityLevel for
                the session.  For sessions being established as a
                result of a SNMP-TARGET-MIB based operation, the
                certificate will potentially have been identified via
                the snmpTlstmParamsTable mapping and the cipher_suites
                will have to be taken from system-wide or
                implementation-specific configuration.  If no row in
                the snmpTlstmParamsTable exists then implementations MAY
                choose to establish the connection using a default
                client certificate available to the application.
                Otherwise, the certificate and appropriate
                cipher_suites will need to be passed to the
                openSession() ASI as supplemental information or
                configured through an implementation-dependent
                mechanism.  It is also implementation-dependent and
                possibly policy-dependent how tmRequestedSecurityLevel
                will be used to influence the security capabilities
                provided by the (D)TLS connection.  However this is
                done, the security capabilities provided by (D)TLS
                MUST be at least as high as the level of security
                indicated by the tmRequestedSecurityLevel parameter.
                The actual security level of the session is reported
                in the tmStateReference cache as tmSecurityLevel.  For
                (D)TLS to provide strong authentication, each
                principal acting as a command generator SHOULD have
                its own certificate.
              </t>
              
              <t>
                Using the destTransportDomain and destTransportAddress
                values, the client will initiate the (D)TLS handshake
                protocol to establish session keys for message
                integrity and encryption.

                <vspace blankLines='1' />

                If the attempt to establish a session is unsuccessful,
                then snmpTlstmSessionOpenErrors is incremented, an
                error indication is returned, and processing stops.
                If the session failed to open because the presented
                server certificate was unknown or invalid then the
                snmpTlstmSessionUnknownServerCertificate or
                snmpTlstmSessionInvalidServerCertificates MUST be
                incremented and a snmpTlstmServerCertificateUnknown or
                snmpTlstmServerInvalidCertificate notification SHOULD be
                sent as appropriate.  Reasons for server certificate
                invalidation includes, but is not limited to,
                cryptographic validation failures and an unexpected
                presented certificate identity.
              </t>
              <t>
                The (D)TLS client MUST then verify that the (D)TLS
                server's presented certificate is the expected
                certificate.  The (D)TLS client MUST NOT transmit SNMP
                messages until the server certificate has been
                authenticated, the client certificate has been
                transmitted and the TLS connection has been fully
                established.

                <vspace blankLines='1' />

                If the connection is being established from
                configuration based on SNMP-TARGET-MIB configuration,
                then the snmpTlstmAddrTable DESCRIPTION clause describes
                how the verification is done (using either a
                certificate fingerprint, or an identity authenticated
                via certification path validation).

                <vspace blankLines='1' />

                If the connection is being established for reasons
                other than configuration found in the SNMP-TARGET-MIB
                then configuration and procedures outside the scope of
                this document should be followed.  Configuration
                mechanisms SHOULD be similar in nature to those
                defined in the snmpTlstmAddrTable to ensure consistency
                across management configuration systems.  For example,
                a command-line tool for generating SNMP GETs might
                support specifying either the server's certificate
                fingerprint or the expected host name as a command
                line argument.
              </t>

              <t>
                (D)TLS provides assurance that the authenticated
                identity has been signed by a trusted configured
                certification authority.  If verification of the
                server's certificate fails in any way (for example
                because of failures in cryptographic verification or
                the presented identity did not match the expected
                named entity) then the session establishment MUST
                fail, the snmpTlstmSessionInvalidServerCertificates
                object is incremented.  If the session can not be
                opened for any reason at all, including cryptographic
                verification failures and snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable
                lookup failures, then the snmpTlstmSessionOpenErrors
                counter is incremented and processing stops.
              </t>
              <t>
                The TLSTM-specific session identifier (tlstmSessionID)
                is set in the tmSessionID of the tmStateReference
                passed to the TLS Transport Model to indicate that the
                session has been established successfully and to point
                to a specific (D)TLS connection for future use.  The
                tlstmSessionID is also stored in the LCD for later
                lookup during processing of incoming messages (<xref
                target="snmpinprocessing" />).

              </t>
            </list>
          </t>
        </section>
        <section title="Accepting a Session as a Server"
          anchor="establishserver">
          <t>
            A (D)TLS server should accept new session connections from
            any client that it is able to verify the client's
            credentials for.  This is done by authenticating the
            client's presented certificate through a certificate path
            validation process (e.g. <xref target="RFC5280" />) or
            through certificate fingerprint verification using
            fingerprints configured in the snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable.
            Afterward the server will determine the identity of the
            remote entity using the following procedures.
          </t>
          <t>
            The (D)TLS server identifies the authenticated identity
            from the (D)TLS client's principal certificate using
            configuration information from the snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable
            mapping table.  The (D)TLS server MUST request and expect
            a certificate from the client and MUST NOT accept SNMP
            messages over the (D)TLS connection until the client has
            sent a certificate and it has been authenticated.  The
            resulting derived tmSecurityName is recorded in the
            tmStateReference cache as tmSecurityName.  The details of
            the lookup process are fully described in the DESCRIPTION
            clause of the snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable MIB object.  If any
            verification fails in any way (for example because of
            failures in cryptographic verification or because of the
            lack of an appropriate row in the snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable)
            then the session establishment MUST fail, and the
            snmpTlstmSessionInvalidClientCertificates object is
            incremented.  If the session can not be opened for any
            reason at all, including cryptographic verification
            failures, then the snmpTlstmSessionOpenErrors counter is
            incremented and processing stops.
          </t>
          <t>
            Servers that wish to support multiple principals at a
            particular port SHOULD make use of a (D)TLS extension that
            allows server-side principal selection like the Server
            Name Indication extension defined in Section 3.1 of <xref
            target="RFC4366" />.  Supporting this will allow, for
            example, sending notifications to a specific principal at
            a given TCP or UDP port.
          </t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section title="Closing a Session">
        <t>
          The TLS Transport Model provides the following primitive to
          close a session:
        </t>
        <t>
          <figure>
            <artwork>
statusInformation =
closeSession(
IN  tmSessionID        -- session ID of the session to be closed
)
            </artwork>
          </figure>
        </t>
        <t>
          The following describes the procedure to follow to close a
          session between a client and server.  This process is
          followed by any SNMP engine closing the corresponding SNMP
          session.
          <list style="format %d)">
            <t>
              Increment either the snmpTlstmSessionClientCloses or the
              snmpTlstmSessionServerCloses counter as appropriate.
            </t>
            <t>
              Look up the session using the tmSessionID.
            </t>
            <t>
              If there is no open session associated with the
              tmSessionID, then closeSession processing is completed.
            </t>
            <t>
              Have (D)TLS close the specified connection.  This MUST
              include sending a close_notify TLS Alert to inform the
              other side that session cleanup may be performed.
            </t>
          </list>
        </t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section title="MIB Module Overview">
      <t>
        This MIB module provides management of the TLS Transport
        Model.  It defines needed textual conventions, statistical
        counters, notifications and configuration infrastructure
        necessary for session establishment.  Example usage of the
        configuration tables can be found in <xref target="examples"
        />.
      </t>
      <section title="Structure of the MIB Module">
        <t>
          Objects in this MIB module are arranged into subtrees.  Each
          subtree is organized as a set of related objects.  The
          overall structure and assignment of objects to their
          subtrees, and the intended purpose of each subtree, is shown
          below.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section title="Textual Conventions">
        <t>
          Generic and Common Textual Conventions used in this module
          can be found summarized at
          http://www.ops.ietf.org/mib-common-tcs.html
        </t>
        <t>
          This module defines the following new Textual Conventions:
          <list style="symbols">
            <t>
              A new TransportAddress format for describing (D)TLS
              connection addressing requirements.
            </t>
            <t>
              A certificate fingerprint allowing MIB module objects to
              generically refer to a stored X.509 certificate using a
              cryptographic hash as a reference pointer.
            </t>
          </list>
        </t>
      </section>
      <section title="Statistical Counters">
        <t>
          The SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB defines counters that provide network
          management stations with information about session usage and
          potential errors that a device may be
          experiencing.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section title="Configuration Tables">
        <t>
          The SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB defines configuration tables that an
          administrator can use for configuring a device for sending
          and receiving SNMP messages over (D)TLS.  In particular,
          there are MIB tables that extend the SNMP-TARGET-MIB for
          configuring (D)TLS certificate usage and a MIB table for
          mapping incoming (D)TLS client certificates to SNMPv3
          securityNames.
        </t>
        <section title="Notifications">
          <t>
            The SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB defines notifications to alert management
            stations when a (D)TLS connection fails because a server's
            presented certificate did not meet an expected value
            (snmpTlstmServerCertificateUnknown) or because cryptographic
            validation failed (snmpTlstmServerInvalidCertificate).
          </t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section title="Relationship to Other MIB Modules">
        <t>
          Some management objects defined in other MIB modules are
          applicable to an entity implementing the TLS Transport
          Model.  In particular, it is assumed that an entity
          implementing the SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB will implement the SNMPv2-MIB
          <xref target="RFC3418" />, the SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB <xref
            target="RFC3411" />, the SNMP-TARGET-MIB <xref target="RFC3413" />,
          the SNMP-NOTIFICATION-MIB <xref target="RFC3413" /> and the
          SNMP-VIEW-BASED-ACM-MIB <xref target="RFC3415" />.
        </t>
        <t>
          The SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB module contained in this document is for
          managing TLS Transport Model information.
        </t>
        <section title="MIB Modules Required for IMPORTS">
          <t>
            The SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB module imports items from SNMPv2-SMI <xref
            target="RFC2578" />, SNMPv2-TC <xref target="RFC2579" />,
            SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB <xref target="RFC3411" />,
            SNMP-TARGET-MIB <xref target="RFC3413" /> and SNMPv2-CONF
            <xref target="RFC2580" />.
          </t>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section title="MIB Module Definition" anchor="mib">
      <t>
        <figure>
          <artwork>
SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN

IMPORTS
    MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE,
    OBJECT-IDENTITY, mib-2, snmpDomains,
    Counter32, Unsigned32, Gauge32, NOTIFICATION-TYPE
      FROM SNMPv2-SMI                   -- RFC2578 or any update thereof
    TEXTUAL-CONVENTION, TimeStamp, RowStatus, StorageType,
    AutonomousType
      FROM SNMPv2-TC                    -- RFC2579 or any update thereof
    MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP, NOTIFICATION-GROUP
      FROM SNMPv2-CONF                  -- RFC2580 or any update thereof
    SnmpAdminString
      FROM SNMP-FRAMEWORK-MIB           -- RFC3411 or any update thereof
    snmpTargetParamsName, snmpTargetAddrName
      FROM SNMP-TARGET-MIB              -- RFC3413 or any update thereof
    ;

snmpTlstmMIB MODULE-IDENTITY
    LAST-UPDATED "201005060000Z"
    ORGANIZATION "ISMS Working Group"
    CONTACT-INFO "WG-EMail:   isms@lists.ietf.org
                  Subscribe:  isms-request@lists.ietf.org

                  Chairs:
                     Juergen Schoenwaelder
                     Jacobs University Bremen
                     Campus Ring 1
                     28725 Bremen
                     Germany
                     +49 421 200-3587
                     j.schoenwaelder@jacobs-university.de

                     Russ Mundy
                     SPARTA, Inc.
                     7110 Samuel Morse Drive
                     Columbia, MD  21046
                     USA

                  Editor:
                     Wes Hardaker
                     Sparta, Inc.
                     P.O. Box 382
                     Davis, CA  95617
                     USA
                     ietf@hardakers.net
                  "

    DESCRIPTION  "
        The TLS Transport Model MIB

        Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as
        the document authors.  All rights reserved.

        Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
        without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject
        to the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD License
        set forth in Section 4.c of the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions
        Relating to IETF Documents
        (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info)."

       REVISION     "201005060000Z"
       DESCRIPTION  "This version of this MIB module is part of
                     RFC XXXX; see the RFC itself for full legal
                     notices."

-- NOTE to RFC editor: replace XXXX with actual RFC number 
--                     for this document and change the date to the
--                     current date and remove this note

    ::= { mib-2 www }
-- RFC Ed.: replace www with IANA-assigned number under the mib-2
--          SNMP OID tree and remove this note

-- ************************************************
-- subtrees of the SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB
-- ************************************************

snmpTlstmNotifications OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { snmpTlstmMIB 0 }
snmpTlstmIdentities    OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { snmpTlstmMIB 1 }
snmpTlstmObjects       OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { snmpTlstmMIB 2 }
snmpTlstmConformance   OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { snmpTlstmMIB 3 }

-- ************************************************
-- snmpTlstmObjects - Objects
-- ************************************************

snmpTLSTCPDomain OBJECT-IDENTITY
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The SNMP over TLS transport domain.  The corresponding 
        transport address is of type SnmpTLSAddress.

        The securityName prefix to be associated with the
        snmpTLSTCPDomain is 'tls'.  This prefix may be used by
        security models or other components to identify which secure
        transport infrastructure authenticated a securityName."
    REFERENCE
      "RFC 2579: Textual Conventions for SMIv2"

    ::= { snmpDomains xx }


-- RFC Ed.: replace xx with IANA-assigned number and
--          remove this note

-- RFC Ed.: replace 'tls' with the actual IANA assigned prefix string
--          if 'tls' is not assigned to this document.

snmpDTLSUDPDomain OBJECT-IDENTITY
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The SNMP over DTLS/UDP transport domain.  The corresponding 
        transport address is of type SnmpTLSAddress.

        The securityName prefix to be associated with the
        snmpDTLSUDPDomain is 'dtls'.  This prefix may be used by
        security models or other components to identify which secure
        transport infrastructure authenticated a securityName."
    REFERENCE
      "RFC 2579: Textual Conventions for SMIv2"

    ::= { snmpDomains yy }


-- RFC Ed.: replace yy with IANA-assigned number and
--          remove this note

-- RFC Ed.: replace 'dtls' with the actual IANA assigned prefix string
--          if 'dtls' is not assigned to this document.

SnmpTLSAddress ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
    DISPLAY-HINT "1a"
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
        "Represents a IPv4 address, an IPv6 address or an US-ASCII
        encoded hostname and port number.

        An IPv4 address must be in dotted decimal format followed by a
        colon ':' (US-ASCII character 0x3A) and a decimal port number
        in US-ASCII.

        An IPv6 address must be a colon separated format (as described
        in I-D.ietf-6man-text-addr-representation), surrounded by
        square brackets ('[', US-ASCII character 0x5B, and ']',
        US-ASCII character 0x5D), followed by a colon ':' (US-ASCII
        character 0x3A) and a decimal port number in US-ASCII.

        A hostname is always in US-ASCII (as per RFC1033);
        internationalized hostnames are encoded in US-ASCII as domain
        names after transformation via the ToASCII operation specified
        in RFC 3490.  The ToASCII operation MUST be performed with the
        UseSTD3ASCIIRules flag set.  The hostname is followed by a
        colon ':' (US-ASCII character 0x3A) and a decimal port number
        in US-ASCII.  The name SHOULD be fully qualified whenever
        possible.

        Values of this textual convention may not be directly usable
        as transport-layer addressing information, and may require
        run-time resolution.  As such, applications that write them
        must be prepared for handling errors if such values are not
        supported, or cannot be resolved (if resolution occurs at the
        time of the management operation).

        The DESCRIPTION clause of TransportAddress objects that may
        have SnmpTLSAddress values must fully describe how (and
        when) such names are to be resolved to IP addresses and vice
        versa.

        This textual convention SHOULD NOT be used directly in object
        definitions since it restricts addresses to a specific
        format.  However, if it is used, it MAY be used either on its
        own or in conjunction with TransportAddressType or
        TransportDomain as a pair.

        When this textual convention is used as a syntax of an index
        object, there may be issues with the limit of 128
        sub-identifiers specified in SMIv2 (STD 58).  It is RECOMMENDED
        that all MIB documents using this textual convention make
        explicit any limitations on index component lengths that
        management software must observe.  This may be done either by
        including SIZE constraints on the index components or by
        specifying applicable constraints in the conceptual row
        DESCRIPTION clause or in the surrounding documentation."
    REFERENCE
      "RFC 1033: DOMAIN ADMINISTRATORS OPERATIONS GUIDE
       RFC 3490: Internationalizing Domain Names in Applications
       I-D.ietf-6man-text-addr-representation: 
           A Recommendation for IPv6 Address Text Representation
      "
    SYNTAX       OCTET STRING (SIZE (1..255))    

-- RFC Editor: if I-D.ietf-6man-text-addr-representation fails to get
-- published then replace the reference to
-- I-D.ietf-6man-text-addr-representation with a reference to
-- "RFC3513: Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) Addressing Architecture"
-- instead.

SnmpTLSFingerprint ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
    DISPLAY-HINT "1x:254x"
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
       "A fingerprint value that can be used to uniquely reference
       other data of potentially arbitrary length.

       A SnmpTLSFingerprint value is composed of a 1-octet hashing
       algorithm identifier followed by the fingerprint value.  The
       octet value encoded is taken from the IANA TLS HashAlgorithm
       Registry (RFC5246).  The remaining octets are filled using the
       results of the hashing algorithm.

       This TEXTUAL-CONVENTION allows for a zero-length (blank)
       SnmpTLSFingerprint value for use in tables where the
       fingerprint value may be optional.  MIB definitions or
       implementations may refuse to accept a zero-length value as
       appropriate."
       REFERENCE "RFC 5246: The Transport Layer
                  Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2
                  http://www.iana.org/assignments/tls-parameters/
       "
       SYNTAX OCTET STRING (SIZE (0..255))

-- Identities for use in the snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable

snmpTlstmCertToTSNMIdentities OBJECT IDENTIFIER
    ::= { snmpTlstmIdentities 1 }

snmpTlstmCertSpecified OBJECT-IDENTITY
    STATUS        current
    DESCRIPTION  "Directly specifies the tmSecurityName to be used for
                  this certificate.  The value of the tmSecurityName
                  to use is specified in the snmpTlstmCertToTSNData
                  column.  The snmpTlstmCertToTSNData column must
                  contain a non-zero length SnmpAdminString compliant
                  value or the mapping described in this row must be
                  considered a failure."
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNMIdentities 1 }

snmpTlstmCertSANRFC822Name OBJECT-IDENTITY
    STATUS        current
    DESCRIPTION  "Maps a subjectAltName's rfc822Name to a 
                  tmSecurityName.  The local part of the rfc822Name is
                  passed unaltered but the host-part of the name must
                  be passed in lower case.

                  Example rfc822Name Field:  FooBar@Example.COM
                  is mapped to tmSecurityName: FooBar@example.com"
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNMIdentities 2 }

snmpTlstmCertSANDNSName OBJECT-IDENTITY
    STATUS        current
    DESCRIPTION  "Maps a subjectAltName's dNSName to a 
                  tmSecurityName after first converting it to all
                  lower case (note that RFC5280 does not specify
                  converting to lower case so this involves an extra
                  step)."
    REFERENCE "RFC5280 - Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure
                         Certificate and Certificate Revocation
                         List (CRL) Profile"
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNMIdentities 3 }

snmpTlstmCertSANIpAddress OBJECT-IDENTITY
    STATUS        current
    DESCRIPTION  "Maps a subjectAltName's iPAddress to a 
                  tmSecurityName by transforming the binary encoded
                  address as follows:


                  1) for IPv4 the value is converted into a decimal
                     dotted quad address (e.g. '192.0.2.1')

                  2) for IPv6 addresses the value is converted into a
                     32-character all lowercase hexadecimal string
                     without any colon separators.

                     Note that the resulting length is the maximum
                     length supported by the View-Based Access Control
                     Model (VACM).  Note that using both the Transport
                     Security Model's support for transport prefixes
                     (see the SNMP-TSM-MIB's
                     snmpTsmConfigurationUsePrefix object for details)
                     will result in securityName lengths that exceed
                     what VACM can handle."
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNMIdentities 4 }

snmpTlstmCertSANAny OBJECT-IDENTITY
    STATUS        current
    DESCRIPTION  "Maps any of the following fields using the
                  corresponding mapping algorithms:

                  |------------+----------------------------|
                  | Type       | Algorithm                  |
                  |------------+----------------------------|
                  | rfc822Name | snmpTlstmCertSANRFC822Name |
                  | dNSName    | snmpTlstmCertSANDNSName    |
                  | iPAddress  | snmpTlstmCertSANIpAddress  |
                  |------------+----------------------------|

                  The first matching subjectAltName value found in the
                  certificate of the above types MUST be used when
                  deriving the tmSecurityName.  The mapping algorithm
                  specified in the 'Algorithm' column MUST be used to
                  derive the tmSecurityName."
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNMIdentities 5 }

snmpTlstmCertCommonName OBJECT-IDENTITY
    STATUS        current

    DESCRIPTION  "Maps a certificate's CommonName to a tmSecurityName
                  after converting it to a UTF-8 encoding.  The usage
                  of CommonNames is deprecated and users are
                  encouraged to use subjectAltName mapping methods
                  instead."
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNMIdentities 6 }

-- The snmpTlstmSession Group

snmpTlstmSession           OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { snmpTlstmObjects 1 }

snmpTlstmSessionOpens  OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       Counter32
    MAX-ACCESS   read-only
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
       "The number of times an openSession() request has been executed
       as an (D)TLS client, regardless of whether it succeeded or
       failed."
    ::= { snmpTlstmSession 1 }

snmpTlstmSessionClientCloses  OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       Counter32
    MAX-ACCESS   read-only
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The number of times a closeSession() request has been
        executed as an (D)TLS client, regardless of whether it
        succeeded or failed."
    ::= { snmpTlstmSession 2 }

snmpTlstmSessionOpenErrors  OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       Counter32
    MAX-ACCESS   read-only
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The number of times an openSession() request failed to open a
        session as a (D)TLS client, for any reason."
    ::= { snmpTlstmSession 3 }

snmpTlstmSessionAccepts  OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       Counter32
    MAX-ACCESS   read-only
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
       "The number of times a (D)TLS server has accepted a new
       connection from a client and has received at least one SNMP
       message through it."
    ::= { snmpTlstmSession 4 }

snmpTlstmSessionServerCloses  OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       Counter32
    MAX-ACCESS   read-only
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The number of times a closeSession() request has been
        executed as an (D)TLS server, regardless of whether it
        succeeded or failed."
    ::= { snmpTlstmSession 5 }

snmpTlstmSessionNoSessions  OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       Counter32
    MAX-ACCESS   read-only
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The number of times an outgoing message was dropped because
        the session associated with the passed tmStateReference was no
        longer (or was never) available."
    ::= { snmpTlstmSession 6 }

snmpTlstmSessionInvalidClientCertificates OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       Counter32
    MAX-ACCESS   read-only
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The number of times an incoming session was not established
        on an (D)TLS server because the presented client certificate
        was invalid.  Reasons for invalidation include, but are not
        limited to, cryptographic validation failures or lack of a
        suitable mapping row in the snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable."
    ::= { snmpTlstmSession 7 }

snmpTlstmSessionUnknownServerCertificate OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       Counter32
    MAX-ACCESS   read-only
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The number of times an outgoing session was not established
         on an (D)TLS client because the server certificate presented
         by a SNMP over (D)TLS server was invalid because no
         configured fingerprint or CA was acceptable to validate it.
         This may result because there was no entry in the
         snmpTlstmAddrTable or because no path could be found to a
         known certification authority."
    ::= { snmpTlstmSession 8 }

snmpTlstmSessionInvalidServerCertificates OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       Counter32
    MAX-ACCESS   read-only
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The number of times an outgoing session was not established
         on an (D)TLS client because the server certificate presented
         by an SNMP over (D)TLS server could not be validated even if
         the fingerprint or expected validation path was known.  I.E.,
         a cryptographic validation error occurred during certificate
         validation processing.

        Reasons for invalidation include, but are not
        limited to, cryptographic validation failures."
    ::= { snmpTlstmSession 9 }

snmpTlstmSessionInvalidCaches OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       Counter32
    MAX-ACCESS   read-only
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The number of outgoing messages dropped because the
        tmStateReference referred to an invalid cache."
    ::= { snmpTlstmSession 10 }

-- Configuration Objects

snmpTlstmConfig             OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { snmpTlstmObjects 2 }

-- Certificate mapping

snmpTlstmCertificateMapping OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { snmpTlstmConfig 1 }

snmpTlstmCertToTSNCount OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      Gauge32
    MAX-ACCESS  read-only
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "A count of the number of entries in the
        snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable"
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertificateMapping 1 }

snmpTlstmCertToTSNTableLastChanged OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      TimeStamp
    MAX-ACCESS  read-only
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The value of sysUpTime.0 when the snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable was
        last modified through any means, or 0 if it has not been
        modified since the command responder was started."
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertificateMapping 2 }

snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF SnmpTlstmCertToTSNEntry
    MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "This table is used by a (D)TLS server to map the (D)TLS
        client's presented X.509 certificate to a tmSecurityName.

        On an incoming (D)TLS/SNMP connection the client's presented
        certificate must either be validated based on an established
        trust anchor, or it must directly match a fingerprint in this
        table. This table does not provide any mechanisms for
        configuring the trust anchors; the transfer of any needed
        trusted certificates for path validation is expected to occur
        through an out-of-band transfer.

        Once the certificate has been found acceptable (either by path
        validation or directly matching a fingerprint in this table),
        this table is consulted to determine the appropriate
        tmSecurityName to identify with the remote connection.  This
        is done by considering each active row from this table in
        prioritized order according to its snmpTlstmCertToTSNID value.
        Each row's snmpTlstmCertToTSNFingerprint value determines
        whether the row is a match for the incoming connection:

            1) If the row's snmpTlstmCertToTSNFingerprint value
               identifies the presented certificate then consider the
               row as a successful match.

            2) If the row's snmpTlstmCertToTSNFingerprint value
               identifies a locally held copy of a trusted CA
               certificate and that CA certificate was used to
               validate the path to the presented certificate then
               consider the row as a successful match.

        Once a matching row has been found, the
        snmpTlstmCertToTSNMapType value can be used to determine how
        the tmSecurityName to associate with the session should be
        determined.  See the snmpTlstmCertToTSNMapType column's
        DESCRIPTION for details on determining the tmSecurityName
        value.  If it is impossible to determine a tmSecurityName from
        the row's data combined with the data presented in the
        certificate then additional rows MUST be searched looking for
        another potential match.  If a resulting tmSecurityName mapped
        from a given row is not compatible with the needed
        requirements of a tmSecurityName (e.g., VACM imposes a
        32-octet-maximum length and the certificate derived
        securityName could be longer) then it must be considered an
        invalid match and additional rows MUST be searched looking for
        another potential match.

        If no matching and valid row can be found, the connection MUST
        be closed and SNMP messages MUST NOT be accepted over it.

        Missing values of snmpTlstmCertToTSNID are acceptable and
        implementations should continue to the next highest numbered
        row.  It is recommended that administrators skip index values
        to leave room for the insertion of future rows (E.G., use values
        of 10 and 20 when creating initial rows).

        Users are encouraged to make use of certificates with
        subjectAltName fields that can be used as tmSecurityNames so
        that a single root CA certificate can allow all child
        certificate's subjectAltName to map directly to a
        tmSecurityName via a 1:1 transformation.  However, this table
        is flexible to allow for situations where existing deployed
        certificate infrastructures do not provide adequate
        subjectAltName values for use as tmSecurityNames.
        Certificates may also be mapped to tmSecurityNames using the
        CommonName portion of the Subject field.  However, the usage
        of the CommonName field is deprecated and thus this usage is
        NOT RECOMMENDED.  Direct mapping from each individual
        certificate fingerprint to a tmSecurityName is also possible
        but requires one entry in the table per tmSecurityName and
        requires more management operations to completely configure a
        device."
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertificateMapping 3 }

snmpTlstmCertToTSNEntry OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      SnmpTlstmCertToTSNEntry
    MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "A row in the snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable that specifies a mapping
        for an incoming (D)TLS certificate to a tmSecurityName to use
        for a connection."
    INDEX   { snmpTlstmCertToTSNID }
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable 1 }

SnmpTlstmCertToTSNEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNID           Unsigned32,
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNFingerprint  SnmpTLSFingerprint,
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNMapType      AutonomousType,
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNData         OCTET STRING,
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNStorageType  StorageType,
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNRowStatus    RowStatus
}

snmpTlstmCertToTSNID OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      Unsigned32 (1..4294967295)
    MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "A unique, prioritized index for the given entry.  Lower
        numbers indicate a higher priority."
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNEntry 1 }

snmpTlstmCertToTSNFingerprint OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      SnmpTLSFingerprint (SIZE(1..255))
    MAX-ACCESS  read-create
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "A cryptographic hash of a X.509 certificate.  The results of
        a successful matching fingerprint to either the trusted CA in
        the certificate validation path or to the certificate itself
        is dictated by the snmpTlstmCertToTSNMapType column."
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNEntry 2 }

snmpTlstmCertToTSNMapType OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      AutonomousType
    MAX-ACCESS  read-create
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "Specifies the mapping type for deriving a tmSecurityName from
        a certificate.  Details for mapping of a particular type SHALL
        be specified in the DESCRIPTION clause of the OBJECT-IDENTITY
        that describes the mapping.  If a mapping succeeds it will
        return a tmSecurityName for use by the TLSTM model and
        processing stops.

        If the resulting mapped value is not compatible with the
        needed requirements of a tmSecurityName (e.g., VACM imposes a
        32-octet-maximum length and the certificate derived
        securityName could be longer) then future rows MUST be
        searched for additional snmpTlstmCertToTSNFingerprint matches
        to look for a mapping that succeeds.

        Suitable values for assigning to this object that are defined
        within the SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB can be found in the
        snmpTlstmCertToTSNMIdentities portion of the MIB tree."
    DEFVAL { snmpTlstmCertSpecified }
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNEntry 3 }

snmpTlstmCertToTSNData OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      OCTET STRING (SIZE(0..1024))
    MAX-ACCESS  read-create
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "Auxiliary data used as optional configuration information for
        a given mapping specified by the snmpTlstmCertToTSNMapType
        column.  Only some mapping systems will make use of this
        column.  The value in this column MUST be ignored for any
        mapping type that does not require data present in this
        column."
    DEFVAL { "" }
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNEntry 4 }

snmpTlstmCertToTSNStorageType OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       StorageType
    MAX-ACCESS   read-create
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The storage type for this conceptual row.  Conceptual rows
        having the value 'permanent' need not allow write-access to
        any columnar objects in the row."
    DEFVAL      { nonVolatile }
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNEntry 5 }

snmpTlstmCertToTSNRowStatus OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      RowStatus
    MAX-ACCESS  read-create
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The status of this conceptual row.  This object may be used
        to create or remove rows from this table.

        To create a row in this table, an administrator must set this
        object to either createAndGo(4) or createAndWait(5).

        Until instances of all corresponding columns are appropriately
        configured, the value of the corresponding instance of the
        snmpTlstmParamsRowStatus column is notReady(3).

        In particular, a newly created row cannot be made active until
        the corresponding snmpTlstmCertToTSNFingerprint,
        snmpTlstmCertToTSNMapType, and snmpTlstmCertToTSNData columns
        have been set.

        The following objects may not be modified while the
        value of this object is active(1):
            - snmpTlstmCertToTSNFingerprint
            - snmpTlstmCertToTSNMapType
            - snmpTlstmCertToTSNData
        An attempt to set these objects while the value of
        snmpTlstmParamsRowStatus is active(1) will result in
        an inconsistentValue error."
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertToTSNEntry 6 }

-- Maps tmSecurityNames to certificates for use by the SNMP-TARGET-MIB

snmpTlstmParamsCount OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      Gauge32
    MAX-ACCESS  read-only
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "A count of the number of entries in the snmpTlstmParamsTable"
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertificateMapping 4 }

snmpTlstmParamsTableLastChanged OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      TimeStamp
    MAX-ACCESS  read-only
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The value of sysUpTime.0 when the snmpTlstmParamsTable
        was last modified through any means, or 0 if it has not been
        modified since the command responder was started."
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertificateMapping 5 }

snmpTlstmParamsTable OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF SnmpTlstmParamsEntry
    MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "This table is used by a (D)TLS client when a (D)TLS
        connection is being set up using an entry in the
        SNMP-TARGET-MIB.  It extends the SNMP-TARGET-MIB's
        snmpTargetParamsTable with a fingerprint of a certificate to
        use when establishing such a (D)TLS connection."
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertificateMapping 6 }

snmpTlstmParamsEntry OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      SnmpTlstmParamsEntry
    MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "A conceptual row containing a fingerprint hash of a locally
        held certificate for a given snmpTargetParamsEntry.  The
        values in this row should be ignored if the connection that
        needs to be established, as indicated by the SNMP-TARGET-MIB
        infrastructure, is not a certificate and (D)TLS based
        connection.  The connection SHOULD NOT be established if the
        certificate fingerprint stored in this entry does not point to
        a valid locally held certificate or if it points to an
        unusable certificate (such as might happen when the
        certificate's expiration date has been reached)."
    INDEX    { IMPLIED snmpTargetParamsName }
    ::= { snmpTlstmParamsTable 1 }

SnmpTlstmParamsEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
    snmpTlstmParamsClientFingerprint SnmpTLSFingerprint,
    snmpTlstmParamsStorageType       StorageType,
    snmpTlstmParamsRowStatus         RowStatus
}

snmpTlstmParamsClientFingerprint OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      SnmpTLSFingerprint
    MAX-ACCESS  read-create
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "This object stores the hash of the public portion of a
        locally held X.509 certificate.  The X.509 certificate, its
        public key, and the corresponding private key will be used
        when initiating a (D)TLS connection as a (D)TLS client."
    ::= { snmpTlstmParamsEntry 1 }

snmpTlstmParamsStorageType OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       StorageType
    MAX-ACCESS   read-create
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The storage type for this conceptual row.  Conceptual rows
        having the value 'permanent' need not allow write-access to
        any columnar objects in the row."
    DEFVAL      { nonVolatile }
    ::= { snmpTlstmParamsEntry 2 }


snmpTlstmParamsRowStatus OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      RowStatus
    MAX-ACCESS  read-create
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The status of this conceptual row.  This object may be used
        to create or remove rows from this table.

        To create a row in this table, an administrator must set this
        object to either createAndGo(4) or createAndWait(5).

        Until instances of all corresponding columns are appropriately
        configured, the value of the corresponding instance of the
        snmpTlstmParamsRowStatus column is notReady(3).

        In particular, a newly created row cannot be made active until
        the corresponding snmpTlstmParamsClientFingerprint column has
        been set.

        The snmpTlstmParamsClientFingerprint object may not be modified
        while the value of this object is active(1).

        An attempt to set these objects while the value of
        snmpTlstmParamsRowStatus is active(1) will result in
        an inconsistentValue error."
    ::= { snmpTlstmParamsEntry 3 }

snmpTlstmAddrCount OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      Gauge32
    MAX-ACCESS  read-only
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "A count of the number of entries in the snmpTlstmAddrTable"
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertificateMapping 7 }

snmpTlstmAddrTableLastChanged OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      TimeStamp
    MAX-ACCESS  read-only
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The value of sysUpTime.0 when the snmpTlstmAddrTable
        was last modified through any means, or 0 if it has not been
        modified since the command responder was started."
    ::= { snmpTlstmCertificateMapping 8 }

snmpTlstmAddrTable OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      SEQUENCE OF SnmpTlstmAddrEntry
    MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "This table is used by a (D)TLS client when a (D)TLS
          connection is being set up using an entry in the
          SNMP-TARGET-MIB.  It extends the SNMP-TARGET-MIB's
          snmpTargetAddrTable so that the client can verify that the
          correct server has been reached.  This verification can use
          either a certificate fingerprint, or an identity
          authenticated via certification path validation.

          If there is an active row in this table corresponding to the
          entry in the SNMP-TARGET-MIB that was used to establish the
          connection, and the row's snmpTlstmAddrServerFingerprint
          column has non-empty value, then the server's presented
          certificate is compared with the
          snmpTlstmAddrServerFingerprint value (and the
          snmpTlstmAddrServerIdentity column is ignored).  If the
          fingerprint matches, the verification has succeeded.  If the
          fingerprint does not match then the connection MUST be
          closed.

          If the server's presented certificate has passed
          certification path validation [RFC5280] to a configured
          trust anchor, and an active row exists with a zero-length
          snmpTlstmAddrServerFingerprint value, then the
          snmpTlstmAddrServerIdentity column contains the expected
          host name.  This expected host name is then compared against
          the server's certificate as follows:

            - Implementations MUST support matching the expected host
            name against a dNSName in the subjectAltName extension
            field and MAY support checking the name against the
            CommonName portion of the subject distinguished name.

            - The '*' (ASCII 0x2a) wildcard character is allowed in the
            dNSName of the subjectAltName extension (and in common
            name, if used to store the host name), but only as the
            left-most (least significant) DNS label in that value.
            This wildcard matches any left-most DNS label in the
            server name.  That is, the subject *.example.com matches
            the server names a.example.com and b.example.com, but does
            not match example.com or a.b.example.com.  Implementations
            MUST support wildcards in certificates as specified above,
            but MAY provide a configuration option to disable them.
            
            - If the locally configured name is an internationalized
            domain name, conforming implementations MUST convert it to
            the ASCII Compatible Encoding (ACE) format for performing
            comparisons, as specified in Section 7 of [RFC5280].
            
          If the expected host name fails these conditions then the
          connection MUST be closed.

          If there is no row in this table corresponding to the entry
          in the SNMP-TARGET-MIB and the server can be authorized by
          another, implementation dependent means, then the connection
          MAY still proceed."

    ::= { snmpTlstmCertificateMapping 9 }

snmpTlstmAddrEntry OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      SnmpTlstmAddrEntry
    MAX-ACCESS  not-accessible
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "A conceptual row containing a copy of a certificate's
        fingerprint for a given snmpTargetAddrEntry.  The values in
        this row should be ignored if the connection that needs to be
        established, as indicated by the SNMP-TARGET-MIB
        infrastructure, is not a (D)TLS based connection.  If an
        snmpTlstmAddrEntry exists for a given snmpTargetAddrEntry then
        the presented server certificate MUST match or the connection
        MUST NOT be established.  If a row in this table does not
        exist to match a snmpTargetAddrEntry row then the connection
        SHOULD still proceed if some other certificate validation path
        algorithm (e.g. RFC5280) can be used."
    INDEX    { IMPLIED snmpTargetAddrName }
    ::= { snmpTlstmAddrTable 1 }

SnmpTlstmAddrEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
    snmpTlstmAddrServerFingerprint    SnmpTLSFingerprint,
    snmpTlstmAddrServerIdentity       SnmpAdminString,
    snmpTlstmAddrStorageType          StorageType,
    snmpTlstmAddrRowStatus            RowStatus
}

snmpTlstmAddrServerFingerprint OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      SnmpTLSFingerprint
    MAX-ACCESS  read-create
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "A cryptographic hash of a public X.509 certificate.  This
        object should store the hash of the public X.509 certificate
        that the remote server should present during the (D)TLS
        connection setup.  The fingerprint of the presented
        certificate and this hash value MUST match exactly or the
        connection MUST NOT be established."
    DEFVAL { "" }
    ::= { snmpTlstmAddrEntry 1 }

snmpTlstmAddrServerIdentity OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      SnmpAdminString
    MAX-ACCESS  read-create
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The reference identity to check against the identity
        presented by the remote system."
    DEFVAL { "" }
    ::= { snmpTlstmAddrEntry 2 }

snmpTlstmAddrStorageType OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX       StorageType
    MAX-ACCESS   read-create
    STATUS       current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The storage type for this conceptual row.  Conceptual rows
        having the value 'permanent' need not allow write-access to
        any columnar objects in the row."
    DEFVAL      { nonVolatile }
    ::= { snmpTlstmAddrEntry 3 }


snmpTlstmAddrRowStatus OBJECT-TYPE
    SYNTAX      RowStatus
    MAX-ACCESS  read-create
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The status of this conceptual row.  This object may be used
        to create or remove rows from this table.

        To create a row in this table, an administrator must set this
        object to either createAndGo(4) or createAndWait(5).

        Until instances of all corresponding columns are
        appropriately configured, the value of the
        corresponding instance of the snmpTlstmAddrRowStatus
        column is notReady(3).

        In particular, a newly created row cannot be made active until
        the corresponding snmpTlstmAddrServerFingerprint column has been
        set.

        Rows MUST NOT be active if the snmpTlstmAddrServerFingerprint
        column is blank and the snmpTlstmAddrServerIdentity is set to
        '*' since this would insecurely accept any presented
        certificate.

        The snmpTlstmAddrServerFingerprint object may not be modified
        while the value of this object is active(1).

        An attempt to set these objects while the value of
        snmpTlstmAddrRowStatus is active(1) will result in
        an inconsistentValue error."
    ::= { snmpTlstmAddrEntry 4 }


-- ************************************************
--  snmpTlstmNotifications - Notifications Information
-- ************************************************

snmpTlstmServerCertificateUnknown NOTIFICATION-TYPE
    OBJECTS { snmpTlstmSessionUnknownServerCertificate }
    STATUS  current
    DESCRIPTION
        "Notification that the server certificate presented by a SNMP
         over (D)TLS server was invalid because no configured
         fingerprint or CA was acceptable to validate it.  This may be
         because there was no entry in the snmpTlstmAddrTable or
         because no path could be found to known certificate
         authority.

         To avoid notification loops, this notification MUST NOT be
         sent to servers that themselves have triggered the
         notification."
    ::= { snmpTlstmNotifications 1 }

snmpTlstmServerInvalidCertificate NOTIFICATION-TYPE
    OBJECTS { snmpTlstmAddrServerFingerprint, 
              snmpTlstmSessionInvalidServerCertificates}
    STATUS  current
    DESCRIPTION
        "Notification that the server certificate presented by an SNMP
         over (D)TLS server could not be validated even if the
         fingerprint or expected validation path was known.  I.E., a
         cryptographic validation error occurred during certificate
         validation processing.

         To avoid notification loops, this notification MUST NOT be
         sent to servers that themselves have triggered the
         notification."
    ::= { snmpTlstmNotifications 2 }

-- ************************************************
-- snmpTlstmCompliances - Conformance Information
-- ************************************************

snmpTlstmCompliances OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { snmpTlstmConformance 1 }

snmpTlstmGroups OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { snmpTlstmConformance 2 }



-- ************************************************
-- Compliance statements
-- ************************************************

snmpTlstmCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "The compliance statement for SNMP engines that support the
        SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB"
    MODULE
        MANDATORY-GROUPS { snmpTlstmStatsGroup,
                           snmpTlstmIncomingGroup,
                           snmpTlstmOutgoingGroup,
                           snmpTlstmNotificationGroup }
    ::= { snmpTlstmCompliances 1 }

-- ************************************************
-- Units of conformance
-- ************************************************
snmpTlstmStatsGroup OBJECT-GROUP
    OBJECTS {
        snmpTlstmSessionOpens,
        snmpTlstmSessionClientCloses,
        snmpTlstmSessionOpenErrors,
        snmpTlstmSessionAccepts,
        snmpTlstmSessionServerCloses,
        snmpTlstmSessionNoSessions,
        snmpTlstmSessionInvalidClientCertificates,
        snmpTlstmSessionUnknownServerCertificate,
        snmpTlstmSessionInvalidServerCertificates,
        snmpTlstmSessionInvalidCaches
    }
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "A collection of objects for maintaining
        statistical information of an SNMP engine which
        implements the SNMP TLS Transport Model."
    ::= { snmpTlstmGroups 1 }

snmpTlstmIncomingGroup OBJECT-GROUP
    OBJECTS {
        snmpTlstmCertToTSNCount,
        snmpTlstmCertToTSNTableLastChanged,
        snmpTlstmCertToTSNFingerprint,
        snmpTlstmCertToTSNMapType,
        snmpTlstmCertToTSNData,
        snmpTlstmCertToTSNStorageType,
        snmpTlstmCertToTSNRowStatus
    }
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "A collection of objects for maintaining
        incoming connection certificate mappings to
        tmSecurityNames of an SNMP engine which implements the
        SNMP TLS Transport Model."
    ::= { snmpTlstmGroups 2 }

snmpTlstmOutgoingGroup OBJECT-GROUP
    OBJECTS {
        snmpTlstmParamsCount,
        snmpTlstmParamsTableLastChanged,
        snmpTlstmParamsClientFingerprint,
        snmpTlstmParamsStorageType,
        snmpTlstmParamsRowStatus,
        snmpTlstmAddrCount,
        snmpTlstmAddrTableLastChanged,
        snmpTlstmAddrServerFingerprint,
        snmpTlstmAddrServerIdentity,
        snmpTlstmAddrStorageType,
        snmpTlstmAddrRowStatus
    }
    STATUS      current
    DESCRIPTION
        "A collection of objects for maintaining
        outgoing connection certificates to use when opening
        connections as a result of SNMP-TARGET-MIB settings."
    ::= { snmpTlstmGroups 3 }

snmpTlstmNotificationGroup NOTIFICATION-GROUP
    NOTIFICATIONS {
        snmpTlstmServerCertificateUnknown,
        snmpTlstmServerInvalidCertificate
    }
    STATUS current
    DESCRIPTION
        "Notifications"
    ::= { snmpTlstmGroups 4 }

END
          </artwork>
        </figure>
      </t>
    </section>
    <section title="Operational Considerations">
      <t>
        This section discusses various operational aspects of
        deploying TLSTM.
      </t>
      <section title="Sessions">
        <t>
          A session is discussed throughout this document as meaning a
          security association between two TLSTM instances.  State
          information for the sessions are maintained in each TLSTM
          implementation and this information is created and destroyed
          as sessions are opened and closed.  A "broken" session (one
          side up and one side down) can result if one side of a
          session is brought down abruptly (i.e., reboot, power
          outage, etc.).  Whenever possible, implementations SHOULD
          provide graceful session termination through the use of
          TLS disconnect messages.  Implementations SHOULD also have a
          system in place for detecting "broken" sessions through the
          use of heartbeats <xref
          target="I-D.seggelmann-tls-dtls-heartbeat" /> or other
          detection mechanisms.
        </t>
        <t>
          Implementations SHOULD limit the lifetime of established
          sessions depending on the algorithms used for generation of
          the master session secret, the privacy and integrity
          algorithms used to protect messages, the environment of the
          session, the amount of data transferred, and the sensitivity
          of the data.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section title="Notification Receiver Credential Selection"> 
        <t>
          When an SNMP engine needs to establish an outgoing session
          for notifications, the snmpTargetParamsTable includes an
          entry for the snmpTargetParamsSecurityName of the target.
          Servers that wish to support multiple principals at a
          particular port SHOULD make use of the Server Name
          Indication extension defined in Section 3.1 of <xref
          target="RFC4366" />.  Without the Server Name Indication the
          receiving SNMP engine (Server) will not know which (D)TLS
          certificate to offer to the Client so that the
          tmSecurityName identity-authentication will be successful.
          </t>
        <t>
          Another solution is to maintain a one-to-one mapping between
          certificates and incoming ports for notification receivers.
          This can be handled at the notification originator by
          configuring the snmpTargetAddrTable (snmpTargetAddrTDomain
          and snmpTargetAddrTAddress) and requiring the receiving SNMP
          engine to monitor multiple incoming static ports based on
          which principals are capable of receiving notifications.
        </t>
        <t>
          Implementations MAY also choose to designate a single
          Notification Receiver Principal to receive all incoming
          notifications or select an implementation specific method of
          selecting a server certificate to present to clients.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section title="contextEngineID Discovery">
        <t>
          SNMPv3 requires that an application know the identifier
          (snmpEngineID) of the remote SNMP protocol engine in order to
          retrieve or manipulate objects maintained on the remote SNMP
          entity.
        </t>
        <t>
          <xref target="RFC5343" /> introduces a well-known
          localEngineID and a discovery mechanism that can be used to
          learn the snmpEngineID of a remote SNMP protocol engine.
          Implementations are RECOMMENDED to support and use the
          contextEngineID discovery mechanism defined in <xref
          target="RFC5343" />.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section title="Transport Considerations">
        <t>
          This document defines how SNMP messages can be transmitted
          over the TLS and DTLS based protocols.  Each of these
          protocols are additionally based on other transports (TCP
          and UDP).  These two base protocols also have operational
          considerations that must be taken into consideration when
          selecting a (D)TLS based protocol to use such as its
          performance in degraded or limited networks.  It is beyond
          the scope of this document to summarize the characteristics
          of these transport mechanisms.  Please refer to the base
          protocol documents for details on messaging considerations
          with respect to MTU size, fragmentation, performance in
          lossy-networks, etc.
        </t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section title="Security Considerations"
      anchor="securityconsiderations">
      <t>
        This document describes a transport model that permits SNMP to
        utilize (D)TLS security services.  The security threats and
        how the (D)TLS transport model mitigates these threats are
        covered in detail throughout this document.  Security
        considerations for DTLS are covered in <xref target="RFC4347"
        /> and security considerations for TLS are described in
        Section 11 and Appendices D, E, and F of TLS 1.2 <xref
        target="RFC5246" />.  When run over a connectionless transport
        such as UDP, DTLS is more vulnerable to denial of service
        attacks from spoofed IP addresses; see Section
        4.2 for details how the cookie exchange is used to address this issue.
      </t>
      <section title="Certificates, Authentication, and Authorization">
        <t>
          Implementations are responsible for providing a security
          certificate installation and configuration mechanism.
          Implementations SHOULD support certificate revocation lists.
        </t>
        <t>
          (D)TLS provides for authentication of the identity of both
          the (D)TLS server and the (D)TLS client.  Access to MIB
          objects for the authenticated principal MUST be enforced by
          an access control subsystem (e.g. the VACM).
        </t>
        <t>
          Authentication of the command generator principal's identity
          is important for use with the SNMP access control subsystem
          to ensure that only authorized principals have access to
          potentially sensitive data.  The authenticated identity of
          the command generator principal's certificate is mapped to
          an SNMP model-independent securityName for use with SNMP
          access control.
        </t>
        <t>
          The (D)TLS handshake only provides assurance that the
          certificate of the authenticated identity has been signed by
          an configured accepted certification authority.  (D)TLS has
          no way to further authorize or reject access based on the
          authenticated identity.  An Access Control Model (such as
          the VACM) provides access control and authorization of a
          command generator's requests to a command responder and a
          notification receiver's authorization to receive
          Notifications from a notification originator.  However to
          avoid man-in-the-middle attacks both ends of the (D)TLS
          based connection MUST check the certificate presented by the
          other side against what was expected.  For example, command
          generators must check that the command responder presented
          and authenticated itself with a X.509 certificate that was
          expected.  Not doing so would allow an impostor, at a
          minimum, to present false data, receive sensitive
          information and/or provide a false belief that configuration
          was actually received and acted upon.  Authenticating and
          verifying the identity of the (D)TLS server and the (D)TLS
          client for all operations ensures the authenticity of the
          SNMP engine that provides MIB data.
        </t>
        <t>
          The instructions found in the DESCRIPTION clause of the
          snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable object must be followed exactly.  It is also
          important that the rows of the table be searched in prioritized order
          starting with the row containing the lowest numbered snmpTlstmCertToTSNID
          value.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section title="(D)TLS Security Considerations">
        <t>This section discusses security considerations specific to
        the usage of (D)TLS.</t>
        <section title="TLS Version Requirements">
          <t>
            Implementations of TLS typically support multiple
            versions of the Transport Layer Security protocol as well as
            the older Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocol.  Because of
            known security vulnerabilities, TLSTM clients and servers
            MUST NOT request, offer, or use SSL 2.0.  See Appendix E.2
            of <xref target="RFC5246" /> for further details.
          </t>
        </section>
        <section title="Perfect Forward Secrecy">
          <t>
            The use of Perfect Forward Secrecy is RECOMMENDED and can
            be provided by (D)TLS with appropriately selected cipher
            suites, as discussed in Appendix F of <xref target="RFC5246" />.
          </t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section title="Use with SNMPv1/SNMPv2c Messages">
        <t>
          <!-- BEGIN copied from RFC5592 -->
          The SNMPv1 and SNMPv2c message
          processing described in <xref target="RFC3584" /> (BCP 74) always
          selects the SNMPv1 or SNMPv2c Security Models, respectively.  Both of
          these and the User-based Security Model typically used with SNMPv3
          derive the securityName and securityLevel from the SNMP message
          received, even when the message was received over a secure transport.
          Access control decisions are therefore made based on the contents of
          the SNMP message, rather than using the authenticated identity and
          securityLevel provided by the TLS Transport Model.
          <!-- END copied from RFC5592 -->
          <!-- Extra text added to provide clarification based on
               comment from Dan Romascanu -->
          It is RECOMMENDED that only SNMPv3 messages using the
          Transport Security Model (TSM) or another
          secure-transport aware security model be sent over the
          TLSTM transport.
        </t>
        <t>
          Using a non-transport-aware Security Model with a secure
          Transport Model is NOT RECOMMENDED.  See <xref
          target="RFC5590" /> Section 7.1 for additional details on
          the coexistence of security-aware transports and
          non-transport-aware security models.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section title="MIB Module Security">
        <t>
          <!-- BEGIN modifications of template from mib-doc-template-xml-04.xml -->
          There are a number of management objects defined in this MIB
          module with a MAX-ACCESS clause of read-write and/or
          read-create.  Such objects may be considered sensitive or
          vulnerable in some network environments.  The support for
          SET operations in a non-secure environment without proper
          protection can have a negative effect on network operations.
          These are the tables and objects and their
          sensitivity/vulnerability:
          <list style="symbols">
            <t>
              The snmpTlstmParamsTable can be used to change the outgoing
              X.509 certificate used to establish a (D)TLS connection.
              Modification to objects in this table need to be
              adequately authenticated since modification to values in
              this table will have profound impacts to the security of
              outbound connections from the device.  Since knowledge
              of authorization rules and certificate usage mechanisms
              may be considered sensitive, protection from disclosure
              of the SNMP traffic via encryption is also highly
              recommended.
            </t>

            <t>
              The snmpTlstmAddrTable can be used to change the
              expectations of the certificates presented by a remote
              (D)TLS server.  Modification to objects in this table
              need to be adequately authenticated since modification
              to values in this table will have profound impacts to
              the security of outbound connections from the device.
              Since knowledge of authorization rules and certificate
              usage mechanisms may be considered sensitive, protection
              from disclosure of the SNMP traffic via encryption is
              also highly recommended.
            </t>

            <t>
              The snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable is used to specify the
              mapping of incoming X.509 certificates to
              tmSecurityNames which eventually get mapped to a SNMPv3
              securityName.  Modification to objects in this table
              need to be adequately authenticated since modification
              to values in this table will have profound impacts to
              the security of incoming connections to the device.
              Since knowledge of authorization rules and certificate
              usage mechanisms may be considered sensitive, protection
              from disclosure of the SNMP traffic via encryption is
              also highly recommended.  When this table contains a
              significant number of rows it may affect the system
              performance when accepting new (D)TLS connections.
            </t>
          </list>
        </t>
        <t>
          Some of the readable objects in this MIB module (i.e.,
          objects with a MAX-ACCESS other than not-accessible) may be
          considered sensitive or vulnerable in some network
          environments.  It is thus important to control even GET
          and/or NOTIFY access to these objects and possibly to even
          encrypt the values of these objects when sending them over
          the network via SNMP.  These are the tables and objects and
          their sensitivity/vulnerability:
          <list style="symbols">
            <t>
              This MIB contains a collection of counters that monitor
              the (D)TLS connections being established with a device.
              Since knowledge of connection and certificate usage
              mechanisms may be considered sensitive, protection from
              disclosure of the SNMP traffic via encryption is also
              highly recommended.
            </t>
          </list>
        </t>
        <!-- END modifications of template from mib-doc-template-xml-04.xml -->
        <!-- BEGIN copied text from mib-doc-template-xml-04.xml -->
        <t>
          SNMP versions prior to SNMPv3 did not include adequate
          security.  Even if the network itself is secure (for example
          by using IPsec), even then, there is no control as to who on
          the secure network is allowed to access and GET/SET
          (read/change/create/delete) the objects in this MIB module.
        </t>
        <t>
          It is RECOMMENDED that implementers consider the security
          features as provided by the SNMPv3 framework (see <xref
          target="RFC3410"/>, section 8), including full support for
          the SNMPv3 cryptographic mechanisms (for authentication and
          privacy).
        </t>
        <t>
          Further, deployment of SNMP versions prior to SNMPv3 is NOT
          RECOMMENDED.  Instead, it is RECOMMENDED to deploy SNMPv3
          and to enable cryptographic security.  It is then a
          customer/operator responsibility to ensure that the SNMP
          entity giving access to an instance of this MIB module is
          properly configured to give access to the objects only to
          those principals (users) that have legitimate rights to
          indeed GET or SET (change/create/delete) them.
        </t>
        <!-- END copied text from mib-doc-template-xml-04.xml -->
      </section>
    </section>
    <section title="IANA Considerations">
      <t>
        IANA is requested to assign:
        <list style="numbers">
          <t>
            Two TCP/UDP port numbers from the "Registered Ports" range
            of the Port Numbers registry, with the following keywords
            (where TBD1 and TBD2 correspond to the assigned port numbers):

            <figure>
              <artwork>
  Keyword         Decimal     Description       References
  -------         -------     -----------       ----------
  snmptls         TBD1/tcp    SNMP-TLS          [RFC-isms-dtls-tm]
  snmpdtls        TBD1/udp    SNMP-DTLS         [RFC-isms-dtls-tm]
  snmptls-trap    TBD2/tcp    SNMP-Trap-TLS     [RFC-isms-dtls-tm]
  snmpdtls-trap   TBD2/udp    SNMP-Trap-DTLS    [RFC-isms-dtls-tm]
              </artwork>
            </figure>

            These are the default ports for receipt of SNMP command
            messages (snmptls and snmpdtls) and SNMP notification
            messages (snmptls-trap and snmpdtls-trap) over a TLS
            Transport Model as defined in this document.
          </t>
          <t>
            An SMI number under snmpDomains for the snmpTLSTCPDomain
            object identifier,
          </t>
          <t>
            An SMI number under snmpDomains for the snmpDTLSUDPDomain
            object identifier,
          </t>
          <t>
            A SMI number under mib-2, for the MIB module in this
            document,
          </t>
          <t>
            "tls" as the corresponding prefix for the snmpTLSTCPDomain
            in the SNMP Transport Model registry,
          </t>
          <t>
            "dtls" as the corresponding prefix for the
            snmpDTLSUDPDomain in the SNMP Transport Model registry,
          </t>
        </list>
      </t>
      <t>
        RFC Editor's note: this section should be replaced with
        appropriate descriptive assignment text after IANA assignments
        are made and prior to publication.
      </t>
    </section>
    <section title="Acknowledgements">
      <t>
        This document closely follows and copies the Secure Shell
        Transport Model for SNMP documented by David Harrington and
        Joseph Salowey in <xref target="RFC5592" />.
      </t>
      <t>
        This document was reviewed by the following people who helped
        provide useful comments (in alphabetical order): Andy Donati,
        Pasi Eronen, David Harrington, Jeffrey Hutzelman, Alan Luchuk,
        Michael Peck, Tom Petch, Randy Presuhn, Ray Purvis, Peter
        Saint-Andre, Joseph Salowey, Jurgen Schonwalder, Dave Shield,
        Robert Story.
      </t>
      <t>
        This work was supported in part by the United States
        Department of Defense.  Large portions of this document are
        based on work by General Dynamics C4 Systems and the following
        individuals: Brian Baril, Kim Bryant, Dana Deluca, Dan Hanson,
        Tim Huemiller, John Holzhauer, Colin Hoogeboom, Dave Kornbau,
        Chris Knaian, Dan Knaul, Charles Limoges, Steve Moccaldi,
        Gerardo Orlando, and Brandon Yip.
      </t>
    </section>
  </middle>
  <back>
    <references title="Normative References">
      &rfc1033;
      &rfc2119;
      &rfc2578;
      &rfc2579;
      &rfc2580;
      &rfc3411;
      &rfc3413;
      &rfc3414;
      &rfc3415;
      &rfc3418;
      &rfc3490;
      &rfc3584;
      &rfc4347;
      <!-- RFC Editor: the reference below to RFC4366 is correct even
      though it's obsolete.  The section we're referencing doesn't
      exist in the new version. -->
      &rfc4366;
      &rfc5246;
      &rfc5280;
      &rfc5590;
      &rfc5591;
      <reference anchor="I-D.draft-ietf-6man-text-addr-representation">
        <front>
          <title>A Recommendation for IPv6 Address Text Representation</title>
          <author initials="S.K." surname="Kawamura" fullname="Seiichi Kawamura">
            <organization>NEC BIGLOBE, Ltd.</organization>
          </author>
          <author initials="M.K." surname="Kawashima" fullname="Masanobu Kawashima">
            <organization>NEC AccessTechnica, Ltd.</organization>
          </author>
        </front>
      </reference>
    </references>
    <references title="Informative References">
      &rfc3410;
      &rfc5343;
      &rfc5592;
      <reference anchor="I-D.seggelmann-tls-dtls-heartbeat">
        <front>
          <title>Transport Layer Security and Datagram Transport Layer Security Heartbeat Extension</title>
          <author initials="R.S." surname="Seggelmann"
            fullname="Robin Seggelmann">
            <organization>Muenster Univ. of Applied Sciences</organization>
          </author>
          <author initials="M.T." surname="Tuexen"
            fullname="Michael Tuexen">
            <organization>Muenster Univ. of Applied Sciences</organization>
          </author>
          <author initials="M.W." surname="Williams"
            fullname="Michael Williams">
          </author>
        </front>
      </reference>
    </references>
    <section title="Target and Notification Configuration Example" anchor="examples">
      <t>
        The following sections describe example configuration for the
        SNMP-TLS-TM-MIB, the SNMP-TARGET-MIB, the NOTIFICATION-MIB and
        the SNMP-VIEW-BASED-ACM-MIB.
      </t>

      <section title="Configuring a Notification Originator">

        <t>The following row adds the "Joe Cool" user to
        the "administrators" group:</t>

        <t>
          <figure>
            <artwork>
    vacmSecurityModel              = 4 (TSM)
    vacmSecurityName               = "Joe Cool"
    vacmGroupName                  = "administrators"
    vacmSecurityToGroupStorageType = 3 (nonVolatile)
    vacmSecurityToGroupStatus      = 4 (createAndGo)
            </artwork>
          </figure>
        </t>

        <t>The following row configures the snmpTlstmAddrTable to use
        certificate path validation and to require the remote
        notification receiver to present a certificate for the
        "server.example.org" identity.</t>

        <t>
          <figure>
            <artwork>
    snmpTargetAddrName             =  "toNRAddr"
    snmpTlstmAddrServerFingerprint =  ""
    snmpTlstmAddrServerIdentity    =  "server.example.org"
    snmpTlstmAddrStorageType       =  3         (nonVolatile)
    snmpTlstmAddrRowStatus         =  4         (createAndGo)
            </artwork>
          </figure>
        </t>

        <t>The following row configures the snmpTargetAddrTable to
        send notifications using TLS/TCP to the snmptls-trap port at
        192.0.2.1:</t>

        <t>
          <figure>
            <artwork>
    snmpTargetAddrName              = "toNRAddr"
    snmpTargetAddrTDomain           = snmpTLSTCPDomain
    snmpTargetAddrTAddress          = "192.0.2.1:XXXsnmptls-trap"
    snmpTargetAddrTimeout           = 1500
    snmpTargetAddrRetryCount        = 3
    snmpTargetAddrTagList           = "toNRTag"
    snmpTargetAddrParams            = "toNR"     (MUST match above)
    snmpTargetAddrStorageType       = 3          (nonVolatile)
    snmpTargetAddrColumnStatus      = 4          (createAndGo)
            </artwork>
          </figure>
        </t>

        <t>RFC Editor's note: replace the string "XXXsnmptls-trap" above
          with the appropriately assigned "snmptls-trap" port.</t>

        <t>The following row configures the snmpTargetParamsTable to 
          send the notifications to "Joe Cool", using authPriv SNMPv3
          notifications through the TransportSecurityModel [RFC5591]:</t>

        <t>
          <figure>
            <artwork>
    snmpTargetParamsName            = toNR
    snmpTargetParamsMPModel         = SNMPv3
    snmpTargetParamsSecurityModel   = 4 (TransportSecurityModel)
    snmpTargetParamsSecurityName    = "Joe Cool"
    snmpTargetParamsSecurityLevel   = 3          (authPriv)
    snmpTargetParamsStorageType     = 3          (nonVolatile)
    snmpTargetParamsRowStatus       = 4          (createAndGo0
            </artwork>
          </figure>
        </t>
      </section>
      <section title="Configuring TLSTM to Utilize a Simple Derivation of tmSecurityName">

        <t>The following row configures the snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable to
        map a validated client certificate, referenced by the client's
        public X.509 hash fingerprint, to a tmSecurityName using the
        subjectAltName component of the certificate.</t>

        <t>
          <figure>
            <artwork>
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNID          = 1
                                    (chosen by ordering preference)
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNFingerprint = HASH (appropriate fingerprint)
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNMapType     = snmpTlstmCertSANAny
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNData        = ""  (not used)
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNStorageType = 3   (nonVolatile)
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNRowStatus   = 4   (createAndGo)
            </artwork>
          </figure>
        </t>

      <t>This type of configuration should only be used when the naming
          conventions of the (possibly multiple) certificate authorities are
          well understood, so two different principals cannot inadvertently be
          identified by the same derived tmSecurityName.</t>
    </section>
    <section title="Configuring TLSTM to Utilize Table-Driven Certificate Mapping">
      <t>The following row configures the snmpTlstmCertToTSNTable to
        map a validated client certificate, referenced by the client's
        public X.509 hash fingerprint, to the directly specified
        tmSecurityName of "Joe Cool".</t>

        <t>
          <figure>
            <artwork>
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNID           = 1
                                     (chosen by ordering preference)
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNFingerprint  = HASH (appropriate fingerprint)
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNMapType      = snmpTlstmCertSpecified
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNSecurityName = "Joe Cool"
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNStorageType  = 3  (nonVolatile)
    snmpTlstmCertToTSNRowStatus    = 4  (createAndGo)
            </artwork>
          </figure>
        </t>
      </section>
    </section>
  </back>
</rfc>
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