Hi,
Please - will people stop just saying 'in the MIB'. Only Ivan has
spoken precisely enough in this thread (by always saying either
'HR MIB' or 'Printer MIB' explicitly) to make his meaning clear.
And since you all three (Ivan, Ron, Dennis) just quietly _disagreed_
because of obscurity about what's a 'port' and what's 'static' in a
configuration, let me try once more.
[Per Ivan]
- Status in Longhorn TcpMon comes ONLY from Host Resources MIB
- Ports in the 'ppmPortTable' should NOT be deleted when
the software/hardware status of a 'port' changes
- because the Longhorn TcpMon tool will only read the
'ppmPortTable' _once_ (to find 'hrDeviceIndex' values)
- Configuration (but NOT status) in Longhorn TcpMon comes from
Printer MIB
- All 'ports' that have the same 'hrDeviceIndex' will always have
the same displayed status in TcpMon
Ron and Dennis - please let's not waste time on discussing how
the Printer MIB was meant to be used. The Printer MIB isn't even
in the logic path for 'port' status in Longhorn's TcpMon.
Cheers,
- Ira
Ira McDonald (Musician / Software Architect)
Blue Roof Music / High North Inc
PO Box 221 Grand Marais, MI 49839
phone: +1-906-494-2434
email: imcdonald at sharplabs.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Ivan Pavicevic [mailto:ivanp at windows.microsoft.com]
Sent: Monday, March 28, 2005 3:04 PM
To: Bergman, Ron; Dennis Carney; pmp at pwg.org; McDonald, Ira
Subject: RE: PMP> Comments on Printer Port Monitor MIB 1.0 working draft
dated March 21, 2005
TcpMon will use the hrDeviceIndex to query for the printer status from Host
Resource MIB and to query for the printer configuration from the Printer MIB
(support for new features in Longhorn OS).
>From the TcpMon perspective, if hrDeviceIndex is reused in the multiport
device, queries described above will hit the same MIB object for different
ports. If this is acceptable for the printer device then we are fine with
this. Note that TcpMon will get data from the Port MIB during printer
installation to allow the user to make a choice between different ports. If
the printer removes the port entry from the table in the Port MIB due to the
functioning failure, the port won't be listed as an option to be picked by
the user. Hence I agree that the Port MIB should reflect configuration of
the ports, not the status.
Thanks,
Ivan
From: pmp-owner at pwg.org [mailto:pmp-owner at pwg.org] On Behalf Of Bergman, Ron
Sent: Monday, March 28, 2005 10:22 AM
To: Dennis Carney; pmp at pwg.org; McDonald, Ira
Subject: RE: PMP> Comments on Printer Port Monitor MIB 1.0 working draft
dated March 21, 2005
Dennis' comments seem to echo the concern I voiced last week. And I agree
with Dennis that a unique
value of hrDeviceIndex is not needed for each service. I have also reviewed
the document and do not find
any text that indicates the value of hrDeviceIndex cannot be the same for
all services.
hrDeviceIndex references a "device" and should not be overloaded to also
indicate a port within a device.
Although I cannot speak for all printers, in the implementations I am
familiar with, it is very unlikely that
only an LPR port or a raw socket port is "down". If a port is disabled (per
the configuration), as Dennis
stated, it will not be present in the MIB. The MIB should be essentially
"Static" and only be modified by
a configuration change.
Ron
-----Original Message-----
From: pmp-owner at pwg.org [mailto:pmp-owner at pwg.org]On Behalf Of Dennis Carney
Sent: Monday, March 28, 2005 9:10 AM
To: pmp at pwg.org; McDonald, Ira
Subject: RE: PMP> Comments on Printer Port Monitor MIB 1.0 working draft d
ated March 21, 2005
Hi Ira,
I would have said that if specifically the LPR port is down for whatever
reason, it wouldn't be listed in the MIB. This opinion was my first
(intuitive) reaction, but it also does not seem to be wrong based on a quick
reading of the document.
Is there a feeling among the people who have been working the most on this
MIB that it is supposed to be "static"--have essentially hard-coded rows and
values for a given printer model? If so, this should probably be made clear
in the document.
Dennis Carney
IBM Printing Systems
"McDonald, Ira" <imcdonald at sharplabs.com>
"McDonald, Ira" <imcdonald at sharplabs.com>
03/27/2005 09:30 AM
To
Dennis Carney/Boulder/IBM at IBMUS, "McDonald, Ira" <imcdonald at sharplabs.com>,
pmp at pwg.org
cc
Subject
RE: PMP> Comments on Printer Port Monitor MIB 1.0 working draft d ated March
21, 2005
Hi Dennis,
OK - I probably picked an unwise example.
If one software channel (LPR) is down, because the thread
crashed (or the operator took down the LPR service), then
EVERY software channel is going to show as down, on your
network printer (remember MS does NOT read Printer MIB).
You're conflating all hardware status with the software
status of channels/interpreters.
But you're welcome to decide this is 'normal' behavior.
Cheers,
- Ira
Ira McDonald (Musician / Software Architect)
Blue Roof Music / High North Inc
PO Box 221 Grand Marais, MI 49839
phone: +1-906-494-2434
email: imcdonald at sharplabs.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Dennis Carney [mailto:dcarney at us.ibm.com]
Sent: Saturday, March 26, 2005 4:37 PM
To: McDonald, Ira; pmp at pwg.org
Subject: RE: PMP> Comments on Printer Port Monitor MIB 1.0 working draft d
ated March 21, 2005
Hi Ira,
Ira wrote:
>If a vendor implements a single 'hrDeviceIndex' value for all ports (i.e.,
channels)
>on the "same" printer, then if ANY port is 'down' in 'hrDeviceStatus' they
will ALL
>be shown 'down' in the MS tools. That's not acceptable behaviour.
To me, that *does* seem like acceptable behavior (or if you'd prefer,
"behaviour"--is that your proximity to Canada showing? :-).
If I am a single network printer advertising both an LPR port and a RAW
port, if my one input tray is out of paper, then *both* ports *should* be in
an "out of paper" state in the host resources MIB.
If instead I want to differentiate between the two (I really can't think of
many good reasons to do this on a network printer), I can do this using two
different indices into the hr MIB. But I would have guessed that 99% of
network printers would simply have all advertised ports (correctly, IMHO)
point to the same hr MIB entry.
Dennis Carney
IBM Printing Systems
"McDonald, Ira" <imcdonald at sharplabs.com>
"McDonald, Ira" <imcdonald at sharplabs.com>
03/26/2005 09:12 AM
To
Dennis Carney/Boulder/IBM at IBMUS, pmp at pwg.org
cc
"Adams, Charles A" <charles.a.adams at office.xerox.com>, "'Bergman, Ron'"
<Ron.Bergman at rpsa.ricoh.com>, mfenelon at windows.microsoft.com
Subject
RE: PMP> Comments on Printer Port Monitor MIB 1.0 working draft d ated March
21, 2005
Hi Dennis,
The Introduction and Background were recently added, for boilerplate
reasons.
They are not authoritative and in fact have not been reviewed.
Microsoft is NOT using the Printer MIB for status at all in Longhorn (per
Mike
Fenelon). The 'hrDeviceTable' and 'hrPrinterTable' in the Host Resources MIB
are the only status that will be displayed by Longhorn for printer ports.
If a vendor implements a single 'hrDeviceIndex' value for all ports (i.e.,
channels)
on the "same" printer, then if ANY port is 'down' in 'hrDeviceStatus' they
will ALL
be shown 'down' in the MS tools. That's not acceptable behaviour.
Cheers,
- Ira
Ira McDonald (Musician / Software Architect)
Blue Roof Music / High North Inc
PO Box 221 Grand Marais, MI 49839
phone: +1-906-494-2434
email: imcdonald at sharplabs.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Dennis Carney [mailto:dcarney at us.ibm.com]
Sent: Friday, March 25, 2005 2:43 PM
To: pmp at pwg.org
Cc: Adams, Charles A; McDonald, Ira; 'Bergman, Ron';
mfenelon at windows.microsoft.com
Subject: RE: PMP> Comments on Printer Port Monitor MIB 1.0 working draft d
ated March 21, 2005
Ira, My reading of the "Introduction" and the "Background" of the document
seems to make it clear that the main MS model *IS* an embedded printer.
Mike Fenelon, is it really true that your port monitor makes it such that
each port *has to* have a different ppmPortHrDeviceIndex? If a network
printer implemented this MIB and advertised both an LPR and a RAW port,
would you really have a problem if both ports had a ppmPortHrDeviceIndex of
1?
Dennis
"McDonald, Ira" <imcdonald at sharplabs.com>
"McDonald, Ira" <imcdonald at sharplabs.com>
Sent by: pmp-owner at pwg.org
03/25/2005 09:14 AMTo
"'Bergman, Ron'" <Ron.Bergman at rpsa.ricoh.com>, "McDonald, Ira"
<imcdonald at sharplabs.com>, "Adams, Charles A"
<charles.a.adams at office.xerox.com>, pmp at pwg.org
cc
Subject
RE: PMP> Comments on Printer Port Monitor MIB 1.0 working draft d ated March
21, 2005
Hi Ron,
Going all the way back to the first Microsoft draft and ever since,
it's clear that the MS "port" entry has to have a separate device
index for each port, because the 'hr...' status objects have to be
separate for EACH port.
Remember the main MS model is NOT an embedded printer. It's either
an external network adaptor or a spooler. In both of these cases,
only ONE protocol is being exposed fore each "port".
This isn't a new restriction.
In the case of an external network adaptor, each "port" is literally
a different direct-connect printer.
Cheers,
- Ira
Ira McDonald (Musician / Software Architect)
Blue Roof Music / High North Inc
PO Box 221 Grand Marais, MI 49839
phone: +1-906-494-2434
email: imcdonald at sharplabs.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Bergman, Ron [mailto:Ron.Bergman at rpsa.ricoh.com]
Sent: Thursday, March 24, 2005 3:03 PM
To: McDonald, Ira; Adams, Charles A; pmp at pwg.org
Subject: RE: PMP> Comments on Printer Port Monitor MIB 1.0 working draft
dated March 21, 2005
Ira,
Regarding your comment:
2. ppmPortHrDeviceIndex - This seems to imply an hrDeviceTable entry is
needed for each port on the system. Is this the expected behavior?
Or is this just the hrDeviceIndex of the printer?
Or is the the hrDeviceIndex for the network card?
<ira> For the Microsoft tool (TCPMon), EACH port (channel) has to
have a separate 'hrDeviceIndex' - this is different than typical
Printer MIB implementations, but it's a Microsoft tool limitation.
Note that Microsoft TCPMon _only_ supports LPR and Raw ports (no
other protocol is supported or contemplated according to co-editor
Mike Fenelon from the Microsoft Longhorn printing team), so this
only means two 'hrDeviceIndex' values at most (for each printer).
</ira>
I do not recall ever hearing this. It certainly is not clear from
the MIB text (see below) that this is the case. If this is true
then it is not really hrDeviceIndex that is indicated but is just
ppmPortIndex.
Also, for the printers I work with there will be a minimum of 10
ports reported. If IPP is enable, there will be a minimum of 15.
The maximum number will be 192.
Ron
>From the MIB:
ppmPortHrDeviceIndex OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Integer32 (0..2147483647)
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The value of 'hrDeviceIndex' in the IETF Host Resources MIB
(RFC 1514/2790), to be used for status queries for this port if
the value of 'ppmPortSnmpStatusQueryEnabled' is 'true'.
If this object is zero, then monitoring applications MUST NOT
attempt status queries for this port in the IETF Host Resources
MIB (RFC 1514/2790) and/or IETF Printer MIB (RFC 1759/3805)."
REFERENCE
"hrDeviceStatus, hrPrinterStatus, hrPrinterDetectedErrorState i
n IETF Host Resources MIB (RFC 1514/2790).
prtChannelStatus in IETF Printer MIB (RFC 1759/3805)."
DEFVAL { 0 } -- no host device index
::= { ppmPortEntry 7 }