Inter-Domain Management: Specification Translation (JIDM_ST) and Interaction Translation (JIDM_IT)
Copyright © January 2000 The Open Group
Technical Standard |
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Inter-Domain Management: Specification Translation and Interaction Translation |
Document Number: C802 |
ISBN: 1-85912-256-6 |
©January 2000, The Open Group All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owners.
Joint publication with the Telecommunications Management Forum (TMN) and Object Management Group (OMG). See also the Acknowledgements page.
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CAE Specifications and Developers' Specifications published prior to January 1998 have the same status as Technical Standards (see above).
Preliminary Specifications have usually addressed an emerging area of technology and consequently are not yet supported by multiple sources of stable conformant implementations. There is a strong preference to develop or adopt more stable specifications as Technical Standards.
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Both OSI management and SNMP form the basis for long-term network management solutions. Similarly, object-oriented development tools such as those being specified by the OMG are increasingly being used as the basis for systems management frameworks.
The aim of the Joint Inter-domain Management (JIDM) project was to provide tools that enable interworking between management systems based on different technologies, notably OSI management, SNMP, and OMG CORBA-based management frameworks. An additional requirement was that these tools must permit technology from one domain to be introduced into the other domains.
To enable this interworking between management systems based on different technologies, it is necessary to be able to map between the relevant object models in each domain, and to build on this to provide mechanisms to handle protocol and behaviour conversions on the domain boundaries.
Also, to interwork between a particular pair of management reference models, two aspects need to be defined:
The Inter-Domain Management Technical Standard provides all these facilities, so allowing:
This functionality is achieved without either party being aware of the conversion.
The Specification Translation scheme is defined in Book 1 of this document.
The Interaction Translation scheme is defined in Book 2 of this document.
Within this dcoument the following conventions are used:
PIDL text fragments appear in Helvetica.
In a number of sections, grammars appear. In these grammars, <xxx> denotes a non-terminal element and a bold typeface denotes literals.
Motif®, OSF/1®, UNIX®, and the "X Device" are registered trademarks and IT DialToneTM; and The Open GroupTM; are trademarks of The Open Group in the U.S. and other countries.
The Open Group acknowledges the work of the Joint Inter-Domain Management (JIDM) working group, comprising members of The Open Group and the Telecommunications Management Forum (TMN). The two specifications comprising Book 1 and Book 2 of this document were developed by the JIDM, under the auspices of a Collaboration Agreement between the TMN and The Open Group.
The Open Group also acknowledges its collaboration with the Object Management Group (OMG), to publish these Inter-Domain Management specifications following their approval and adoption through both the OMG's and The Open Group's respective approval processes.
Particular expert contributors and companies/organizations are individually acknowledged in the Acknowledgement page at the front of each of Book 1 and Book 2.
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