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Cisco AJ732A - MDS 9134 Fabric Switch Quick Reference Manual page 35

Cisco mds 9000 family mib quick reference (ol-18087-01, february 2009)
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S e n d d o c u m e n t a t i o n c o m m e n t s t o m d s f e e d b a c k - d o c @ c i s c o . c o m
CISCO-FLEXATTACH-MIB
This MIB enables the automatic generation of virtual WWNs on all of the Fport interfaces whose
fcIfOperMode is 'fPort'.
The Nxports register with the Fxports with a port WWN as indicated by object fcNameServerPortName
in the CISCO-NS-MIB. Generally, the Nxports are zoned with other devices which they need to
communicate using this port WWN. However, if the device containing Nx port has to be replaced, zoning
has to be reconfigured using the port WWN of the new device to eliminate the need for a zoning change,
a special WWN is assigned to the corresponding Fport and the original port WWN is replaced with this
special WWN for any device that is logging through the Fport. In addition, the zoning is configured using
the special WWN.
CISCO-FSPF-MIB
This MIB configures and monitors the Fabric Shortest Path First (FSPF) parameters on all VSANs
configured on the local switch. FSPF is the protocol currently standardized by the T11 committee for
routing in Fibre Channel networks. Refer to http://www.t11.org.
CISCO-HC-ALARM-MIB
This MIB defines RMON-MIB(RFC 2819) extensions for high-capacity alarms. This MIB is based on
the Internet Draft (draft-ietf-rmonmib-hc-alarm-mib-02.txt). In terms of object syntax and semantics,
the content of this Cisco MIB is the same as the corresponding Internet Draft revision. This Cisco MIB
was created because of the "subject to change" nature of Internet Drafts. This Cisco MIB eventually
maybe replaced by a stable RFC.
This MIB configures RMON alarms that require high-capacity counters (64-bit counters).
CISCO-IETF-IP-FORWARD-MIB
This MIB was extracted from the draft-ietf-ipngwg-rfc2096-update-00.txt. In terms of object syntax and
semantics, the content of this Cisco MIB is the same as the corresponding I-D revision. This Cisco MIB
is created due to the "subject to change" nature of the I-Ds. This Cisco MIB may later be deprecated,
and the stable RFC, which may replace the I-D, may be implemented in its place.
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