Table Of Contents
Technology Support Introduction
Supported Technologies
Networking-Related IMOs
Termination Points
Forwarding Components
Scheme Values
Polling Interval Values
Technology Support Introduction
Part 2—Technology Support and Information Model Objects outlines the level of functionality that Cisco ANA provides for each technology it supports. This chapter covers the following topics:
•
Supported Technologies
•
Networking-Related IMOs
•
Scheme Values
•
Polling Interval Values
Note
Part 2 describes general Cisco ANA capabilities for each technology covered. The specific level of support provided for a particular technology on an individual Cisco ANA Virtual Network Element (VNEs) can vary. For details on technology support on individual VNEs, see Part 1—Cisco VNEs.
Supported Technologies
Table 9-1 lists the technologies supported in this version of the product.
Cisco ANA provides different levels of support for each technology. The fact that a specific technology is listed in Table 9-1 does not imply that every aspect of every relevant standard is represented and supported. For details on the level of support provided for each technology, see the description for that technology in the chapter listed in the "Chapter Reference" column.
In addition to supporting specific technologies, Cisco ANA:
•
Relies on several abstract modeling components used throughout product. For details, see Chapter 37, "Common Components."
•
Uses common approaches to discovering and modeling network topologies. For details, see Chapter 38, "Cisco ANA VNE Topology."
Table 9-1 Supported Technologies
Technology Family
|
Technology Group
|
Technology
|
Chapter Reference
|
Network (Layer 3)
|
IP
|
IP (including IPv6)
|
Chapter 10, "Internet Protocol"
|
Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)
|
Hot Standby Router Protocol (HSRP)
|
Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE)
|
Carrier Grade NAT
|
IP SLA Responder
|
|
Routing Protocols
|
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), Multiprotocol extensions (MP-BGP), external BGP (eBGP)
|
Chapter 11, "Routing Protocols"
|
Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) and OSPFv3
|
Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS)
|
VPN and VRF
|
Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF)
|
Chapter 12, "VPN and VRF"
|
VRF-Lite (Multi-VRF)
|
VPN
|
6VPE
|
BFD
|
Bidirectional Forwarding Detection
|
Chapter 13, "Bidirectional Forwarding Detection"
|
SBC
|
Session Border Controller
|
Chapter 14, "Session Border Controller"
|
Hybrid Network/ Data Link (Layers 3 and 2)
|
MPLS
|
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS)
|
Chapter 15, "Multiprotocol Label Switching"
|
Label Distribution Protocol (LDP)
|
MPLS TE
|
Multiprotocol Label Switching Traffic Engineering (MPLS TE)
|
Chapter 16, "Multiprotocol Label Switching Traffic Engineering"
|
MPLS TE Fast Reroute (MPLS TE FRR)
|
Pseudowire
|
Pseudowire Emulation Edge to Edge (PWE3)
|
Chapter 17, "Pseudowire"
|
TDM Pseudowire
|
Multi-segment Pseudowire
|
ATM over Pseudowire (ATM PW)
|
PW-to-TE Tunnel Mapping
|
Clocking
|
IE1588
|
Chapter 32, "Clocking"
|
SyncE
|
ACR
|
Data Link/MAC (Layer 2)
|
Ethernet
|
Ethernet (IEEE 802.3)
|
Chapter 18, "Ethernet (IEEE 802.3)"
|
VLAN (IEEE 802.1Q)
|
QinQ (IEEE 802.1ad)
|
LAG (IEEE 802.3ad)
|
Ethernet Channel
|
STP (IEEE 802.1D)
|
RSTP (IEEE 802.1w)
|
PvSTP
|
MST (IEEE 802.1s)
|
SVI
|
VTP
|
REP
|
VPLS and VSI
|
H-VPLS
|
PBB
|
EFP
|
Ethernet OAM
|
CFM (Cisco and Draft 8.1)
|
Chapter 19, "Ethernet OAM"
|
Link OAM
|
Ethernet LMI
|
ATM
|
ATM
|
Chapter 20, "Asynchronous Transfer Mode"
|
IMA
|
ATM Cross-Connect
|
IP over ATM (MPoA 1483R)
|
Ethernet over ATM (MPoA 1483B)
|
Frame Relay
|
Frame Relay
|
Chapter 21, "Frame Relay"
|
ISDN
|
Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN)
|
Chapter 22, "Integrated Services Digital Network"
|
PPP
|
Point To Point Protocol (PPP)
|
Chapter 23, "Point-to-Point Protocol"
|
POS
|
PPPoA, PPPoE, PPPoFR
|
Multilink PPP
|
HDLC
|
High-Level Data Link Control (HDLC)
|
Chapter 24, "High-Level Data Link Control"
|
L2TP
|
Layer 2 Tunnel Protocol (L2TP)
|
Chapter 25, "Layer 2 Tunnel Protocol"
|
Data Link/MAC (Layer 2) (cont.)
|
Discovery Protocols
|
CDP, LLDP
|
Chapter 26, "Discovery Protocols"
|
LLDP
|
Link Layer Discovery Protocol
|
Local Switching
|
Local Switching
|
Chapter 27, "Local Switching"
|
Physical Layer (Layer 1)
|
xDSL
|
Digital Subscriber Line (xDSL)
|
Chapter 28, "Digital Subscriber Line"
|
IPoDWDM
|
Internet Protocol over Dense Wave Division Multiplexing (IPoDWDM)
|
Chapter 30, "Internet Protocol Over Dense Wave Division Multiplexing"
|
SONET/SDH
|
SONET/SDH
|
Chapter 29, "SONET/SDH"
|
TDM/DSx
|
TDM
|
Chapter 31, "TDM/DSx"
|
DSx
|
T3/E3
|
Channelized T3, OC3, DS3 interface
|
Serial
|
Serial
|
Chapter 33, "Serial"
|
Other
|
Security
|
Access Control Lists (ACLs)
|
Chapter 34, "Access Control Lists"
|
Hardware
|
Physical Containment
|
Chapter 35, "Physical Components"
|
Logical Containment
|
Chapter 36, "Logical Components"
|
Common
|
Common Components
|
Chapter 37, "Common Components"
|
Local Switching
|
Networking-Related IMOs
Networking-related Information Model Objects (IMOs) represent the networking aspects of a network element (NE). The two major categories of IMOs are termination points and forwarding components.
For information about IMO changes in Cisco ANA 3.7, please see http://developer.cisco.com/web/ana/integration.
Termination Points
Termination points represent the endpoints of a connection. A termination point may represent a physical endpoint (for example, a port connector) or a connection endpoint (such as an ATM layer of a port). A connection endpoint can also be called a network interface.
Termination points are related by containment. The following attributes express those containment relationships:
•
Contained Connection Termination Point—Points to all upper-layer termination points bound to this termination point.
•
Containing Termination Points—Points to all lower-layer termination points to which this termination point is bound.
The relation between termination points may represent one of the following:
•
Type of hardware. For example:
A SONET/SDH port with a fiber-optic connector is represented by two IMOs:
–
Port Connector IMO—Represents the fiber-optic connector.
–
SonetSdh IMO—Represents the SONET/SDH port.
The Port Connector IMO contains the SonetSdh IMO. This containment relationship is represented as follows:
–
The Port Connector IMO points to the SonetSdh IMO with the Contained Connection Termination Point attribute.
–
The SonetSdh IMO points to the Port Connector IMO with the Containing Termination Point attribute.
•
Configuration. For example:
An Ethernet port configured with an IP address (and, optionally, other network-layer attributes) is represented by two IMOs:
–
Ethernet Interface IMO—Represents the Ethernet layer of the port.
–
IP Interface IMO—Represents the network-layer aspect, including the IP address configured on the port.
The Ethernet Interface IMO contains the IP Interface IMO. This containment relationship is represented as follows:
–
The Ethernet Interface IMO points to the IP Interface IMO with the Contained Connection Termination Point attribute.
–
The IP Interface IMO points to the Ethernet Interface IMO with the Containing Termination Point attribute.
•
State. For example:
An active PPP connection running on top of ATM VC is represented by two IMOs:
–
Atm Vc IMO—Represents the ATM VC.
–
Vc Based Encapsulation IMO—Represents the PPPoA encapsulation.
The Atm Vc IMO contains the Vc Based Encapsulation IMO. This containment relationship is represented as follows:
–
The Atm Vc IMO points to the IP Vc Based Encapsulation IMO with the Contained Connection Termination Point attribute.
–
The Vc Based Encapsulation IMO points to the Atm Vc IMO with the Containing Termination Point attribute.
Note
The relationship between termination points may be restricted to specific termination point types, based on how the technology is implemented. For example, a physical layer IMO may not contain an IP Interface IMO, which represents the network layer interface.
Forwarding Components
Forwarding components represent components that perform some type of forwarding function between termination points. Among other things, forwarding components can represent routing, bridging, and switching components in the NE.
Each forwarding component has a logical association with the termination points for which it does the forwarding. This relationship is expressed by the logical associations attribute of the forwarding component IMO. An example of such a relationship would be the logical association between an IVcSwitchingEntity IMO representing the ATM/FR switching fabric and the IAtm/IFrameRelay IMOs representing the relevant ATM/FR ports.
Note
The support level of each network technology can be varied. The support level is reflected in its related IMOs with their attributes, network topology, and fault and alarm correlation, as described in each of this Guide's technology chapters and in the Common Components chapter.
The polling intervals for the relationship between the termination points, as well as between them and the various forwarding components, are more complex than can be uniformly expressed, so they are marked as Not Applicable (N/A) in their corresponding Polling Interval columns. This applies to Containing Termination Points, Contained Connection Termination Points, and Logical Sons attributes of an IMO.
Scheme Values
The Scheme column of each IMO table can have the following values:
•
IPCore
•
Product
•
Any
•
N/A—This value is populated as part of the creation of the IMO, not by polling the device.
Polling Interval Values
The Polling Interval column of each IMO table can have the following values:
•
Status
•
Configuration
•
System
•
Topology Layer 1 (Topology L1)
•
Topology Layer 2 (Topology L2)
•
N/A—Not every property has a polling interval. Some properties are created from the results of multiple queries, and there is no specific polling for them.
•
For more information about polling intervals, see the Cisco Active Network Abstraction 3.7.1 Administrator Guide