| module ietf-yang-types { | |
| yang-version 1; | |
| namespace | |
| "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-yang-types"; | |
| prefix yang; | |
| organization | |
| "IETF NETMOD (NETCONF Data Modeling Language) Working Group"; | |
| contact | |
| "WG Web: <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/netmod/> | |
| WG List: <mailto:netmod@ietf.org> | |
| WG Chair: David Kessens | |
| <mailto:david.kessens@nsn.com> | |
| WG Chair: Juergen Schoenwaelder | |
| <mailto:j.schoenwaelder@jacobs-university.de> | |
| Editor: Juergen Schoenwaelder | |
| <mailto:j.schoenwaelder@jacobs-university.de>"; | |
| description | |
| "This module contains a collection of generally useful derived | |
| YANG data types. | |
| Copyright (c) 2013 IETF Trust and the persons identified as | |
| authors of the code. 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). | |
| This version of this YANG module is part of RFC 6991; see | |
| the RFC itself for full legal notices."; | |
| revision "2013-07-15" { | |
| description | |
| "This revision adds the following new data types: | |
| - yang-identifier | |
| - hex-string | |
| - uuid | |
| - dotted-quad"; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 6991: Common YANG Data Types"; | |
| } | |
| revision "2010-09-24" { | |
| description "Initial revision."; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 6021: Common YANG Data Types"; | |
| } | |
| typedef counter32 { | |
| type uint32; | |
| description | |
| "The counter32 type represents a non-negative integer | |
| that monotonically increases until it reaches a | |
| maximum value of 2^32-1 (4294967295 decimal), when it | |
| wraps around and starts increasing again from zero. | |
| Counters have no defined 'initial' value, and thus, a | |
| single value of a counter has (in general) no information | |
| content. Discontinuities in the monotonically increasing | |
| value normally occur at re-initialization of the | |
| management system, and at other times as specified in the | |
| description of a schema node using this type. If such | |
| other times can occur, for example, the creation of | |
| a schema node of type counter32 at times other than | |
| re-initialization, then a corresponding schema node | |
| should be defined, with an appropriate type, to indicate | |
| the last discontinuity. | |
| The counter32 type should not be used for configuration | |
| schema nodes. A default statement SHOULD NOT be used in | |
| combination with the type counter32. | |
| In the value set and its semantics, this type is equivalent | |
| to the Counter32 type of the SMIv2."; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 2578: Structure of Management Information Version 2 | |
| (SMIv2)"; | |
| } | |
| typedef zero-based-counter32 { | |
| type counter32; | |
| default "0"; | |
| description | |
| "The zero-based-counter32 type represents a counter32 | |
| that has the defined 'initial' value zero. | |
| A schema node of this type will be set to zero (0) on creation | |
| and will thereafter increase monotonically until it reaches | |
| a maximum value of 2^32-1 (4294967295 decimal), when it | |
| wraps around and starts increasing again from zero. | |
| Provided that an application discovers a new schema node | |
| of this type within the minimum time to wrap, it can use the | |
| 'initial' value as a delta. It is important for a management | |
| station to be aware of this minimum time and the actual time | |
| between polls, and to discard data if the actual time is too | |
| long or there is no defined minimum time. | |
| In the value set and its semantics, this type is equivalent | |
| to the ZeroBasedCounter32 textual convention of the SMIv2."; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 4502: Remote Network Monitoring Management Information | |
| Base Version 2"; | |
| } | |
| typedef counter64 { | |
| type uint64; | |
| description | |
| "The counter64 type represents a non-negative integer | |
| that monotonically increases until it reaches a | |
| maximum value of 2^64-1 (18446744073709551615 decimal), | |
| when it wraps around and starts increasing again from zero. | |
| Counters have no defined 'initial' value, and thus, a | |
| single value of a counter has (in general) no information | |
| content. Discontinuities in the monotonically increasing | |
| value normally occur at re-initialization of the | |
| management system, and at other times as specified in the | |
| description of a schema node using this type. If such | |
| other times can occur, for example, the creation of | |
| a schema node of type counter64 at times other than | |
| re-initialization, then a corresponding schema node | |
| should be defined, with an appropriate type, to indicate | |
| the last discontinuity. | |
| The counter64 type should not be used for configuration | |
| schema nodes. A default statement SHOULD NOT be used in | |
| combination with the type counter64. | |
| In the value set and its semantics, this type is equivalent | |
| to the Counter64 type of the SMIv2."; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 2578: Structure of Management Information Version 2 | |
| (SMIv2)"; | |
| } | |
| typedef zero-based-counter64 { | |
| type counter64; | |
| default "0"; | |
| description | |
| "The zero-based-counter64 type represents a counter64 that | |
| has the defined 'initial' value zero. | |
| A schema node of this type will be set to zero (0) on creation | |
| and will thereafter increase monotonically until it reaches | |
| a maximum value of 2^64-1 (18446744073709551615 decimal), | |
| when it wraps around and starts increasing again from zero. | |
| Provided that an application discovers a new schema node | |
| of this type within the minimum time to wrap, it can use the | |
| 'initial' value as a delta. It is important for a management | |
| station to be aware of this minimum time and the actual time | |
| between polls, and to discard data if the actual time is too | |
| long or there is no defined minimum time. | |
| In the value set and its semantics, this type is equivalent | |
| to the ZeroBasedCounter64 textual convention of the SMIv2."; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 2856: Textual Conventions for Additional High Capacity | |
| Data Types"; | |
| } | |
| typedef gauge32 { | |
| type uint32; | |
| description | |
| "The gauge32 type represents a non-negative integer, which | |
| may increase or decrease, but shall never exceed a maximum | |
| value, nor fall below a minimum value. The maximum value | |
| cannot be greater than 2^32-1 (4294967295 decimal), and | |
| the minimum value cannot be smaller than 0. The value of | |
| a gauge32 has its maximum value whenever the information | |
| being modeled is greater than or equal to its maximum | |
| value, and has its minimum value whenever the information | |
| being modeled is smaller than or equal to its minimum value. | |
| If the information being modeled subsequently decreases | |
| below (increases above) the maximum (minimum) value, the | |
| gauge32 also decreases (increases). | |
| In the value set and its semantics, this type is equivalent | |
| to the Gauge32 type of the SMIv2."; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 2578: Structure of Management Information Version 2 | |
| (SMIv2)"; | |
| } | |
| typedef gauge64 { | |
| type uint64; | |
| description | |
| "The gauge64 type represents a non-negative integer, which | |
| may increase or decrease, but shall never exceed a maximum | |
| value, nor fall below a minimum value. The maximum value | |
| cannot be greater than 2^64-1 (18446744073709551615), and | |
| the minimum value cannot be smaller than 0. The value of | |
| a gauge64 has its maximum value whenever the information | |
| being modeled is greater than or equal to its maximum | |
| value, and has its minimum value whenever the information | |
| being modeled is smaller than or equal to its minimum value. | |
| If the information being modeled subsequently decreases | |
| below (increases above) the maximum (minimum) value, the | |
| gauge64 also decreases (increases). | |
| In the value set and its semantics, this type is equivalent | |
| to the CounterBasedGauge64 SMIv2 textual convention defined | |
| in RFC 2856"; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 2856: Textual Conventions for Additional High Capacity | |
| Data Types"; | |
| } | |
| typedef object-identifier { | |
| type string { | |
| pattern | |
| '(([0-1](\.[1-3]?[0-9]))|(2\.(0|([1-9]\d*))))(\.(0|([1-9]\d*)))*'; | |
| } | |
| description | |
| "The object-identifier type represents administratively | |
| assigned names in a registration-hierarchical-name tree. | |
| Values of this type are denoted as a sequence of numerical | |
| non-negative sub-identifier values. Each sub-identifier | |
| value MUST NOT exceed 2^32-1 (4294967295). Sub-identifiers | |
| are separated by single dots and without any intermediate | |
| whitespace. | |
| The ASN.1 standard restricts the value space of the first | |
| sub-identifier to 0, 1, or 2. Furthermore, the value space | |
| of the second sub-identifier is restricted to the range | |
| 0 to 39 if the first sub-identifier is 0 or 1. Finally, | |
| the ASN.1 standard requires that an object identifier | |
| has always at least two sub-identifiers. The pattern | |
| captures these restrictions. | |
| Although the number of sub-identifiers is not limited, | |
| module designers should realize that there may be | |
| implementations that stick with the SMIv2 limit of 128 | |
| sub-identifiers. | |
| This type is a superset of the SMIv2 OBJECT IDENTIFIER type | |
| since it is not restricted to 128 sub-identifiers. Hence, | |
| this type SHOULD NOT be used to represent the SMIv2 OBJECT | |
| IDENTIFIER type; the object-identifier-128 type SHOULD be | |
| used instead."; | |
| reference | |
| "ISO9834-1: Information technology -- Open Systems | |
| Interconnection -- Procedures for the operation of OSI | |
| Registration Authorities: General procedures and top | |
| arcs of the ASN.1 Object Identifier tree"; | |
| } | |
| typedef object-identifier-128 { | |
| type object-identifier { | |
| pattern '\d*(\.\d*){1,127}'; | |
| } | |
| description | |
| "This type represents object-identifiers restricted to 128 | |
| sub-identifiers. | |
| In the value set and its semantics, this type is equivalent | |
| to the OBJECT IDENTIFIER type of the SMIv2."; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 2578: Structure of Management Information Version 2 | |
| (SMIv2)"; | |
| } | |
| typedef yang-identifier { | |
| type string { | |
| length "1..max"; | |
| pattern '[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9\-_.]*'; | |
| pattern | |
| '.|..|[^xX].*|.[^mM].*|..[^lL].*'; | |
| } | |
| description | |
| "A YANG identifier string as defined by the 'identifier' | |
| rule in Section 12 of RFC 6020. An identifier must | |
| start with an alphabetic character or an underscore | |
| followed by an arbitrary sequence of alphabetic or | |
| numeric characters, underscores, hyphens, or dots. | |
| A YANG identifier MUST NOT start with any possible | |
| combination of the lowercase or uppercase character | |
| sequence 'xml'."; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 6020: YANG - A Data Modeling Language for the Network | |
| Configuration Protocol (NETCONF)"; | |
| } | |
| typedef date-and-time { | |
| type string { | |
| pattern | |
| '\d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2}T\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2}(\.\d+)?(Z|[\+\-]\d{2}:\d{2})'; | |
| } | |
| description | |
| "The date-and-time type is a profile of the ISO 8601 | |
| standard for representation of dates and times using the | |
| Gregorian calendar. The profile is defined by the | |
| date-time production in Section 5.6 of RFC 3339. | |
| The date-and-time type is compatible with the dateTime XML | |
| schema type with the following notable exceptions: | |
| (a) The date-and-time type does not allow negative years. | |
| (b) The date-and-time time-offset -00:00 indicates an unknown | |
| time zone (see RFC 3339) while -00:00 and +00:00 and Z | |
| all represent the same time zone in dateTime. | |
| (c) The canonical format (see below) of data-and-time values | |
| differs from the canonical format used by the dateTime XML | |
| schema type, which requires all times to be in UTC using | |
| the time-offset 'Z'. | |
| This type is not equivalent to the DateAndTime textual | |
| convention of the SMIv2 since RFC 3339 uses a different | |
| separator between full-date and full-time and provides | |
| higher resolution of time-secfrac. | |
| The canonical format for date-and-time values with a known time | |
| zone uses a numeric time zone offset that is calculated using | |
| the device's configured known offset to UTC time. A change of | |
| the device's offset to UTC time will cause date-and-time values | |
| to change accordingly. Such changes might happen periodically | |
| in case a server follows automatically daylight saving time | |
| (DST) time zone offset changes. The canonical format for | |
| date-and-time values with an unknown time zone (usually | |
| referring to the notion of local time) uses the time-offset | |
| -00:00."; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 3339: Date and Time on the Internet: Timestamps | |
| RFC 2579: Textual Conventions for SMIv2 | |
| XSD-TYPES: XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition"; | |
| } | |
| typedef timeticks { | |
| type uint32; | |
| description | |
| "The timeticks type represents a non-negative integer that | |
| represents the time, modulo 2^32 (4294967296 decimal), in | |
| hundredths of a second between two epochs. When a schema | |
| node is defined that uses this type, the description of | |
| the schema node identifies both of the reference epochs. | |
| In the value set and its semantics, this type is equivalent | |
| to the TimeTicks type of the SMIv2."; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 2578: Structure of Management Information Version 2 | |
| (SMIv2)"; | |
| } | |
| typedef timestamp { | |
| type timeticks; | |
| description | |
| "The timestamp type represents the value of an associated | |
| timeticks schema node at which a specific occurrence | |
| happened. The specific occurrence must be defined in the | |
| description of any schema node defined using this type. When | |
| the specific occurrence occurred prior to the last time the | |
| associated timeticks attribute was zero, then the timestamp | |
| value is zero. Note that this requires all timestamp values | |
| to be reset to zero when the value of the associated timeticks | |
| attribute reaches 497+ days and wraps around to zero. | |
| The associated timeticks schema node must be specified | |
| in the description of any schema node using this type. | |
| In the value set and its semantics, this type is equivalent | |
| to the TimeStamp textual convention of the SMIv2."; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 2579: Textual Conventions for SMIv2"; | |
| } | |
| typedef phys-address { | |
| type string { | |
| pattern | |
| '([0-9a-fA-F]{2}(:[0-9a-fA-F]{2})*)?'; | |
| } | |
| description | |
| "Represents media- or physical-level addresses represented | |
| as a sequence octets, each octet represented by two hexadecimal | |
| numbers. Octets are separated by colons. The canonical | |
| representation uses lowercase characters. | |
| In the value set and its semantics, this type is equivalent | |
| to the PhysAddress textual convention of the SMIv2."; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 2579: Textual Conventions for SMIv2"; | |
| } | |
| typedef mac-address { | |
| type string { | |
| pattern | |
| '[0-9a-fA-F]{2}(:[0-9a-fA-F]{2}){5}'; | |
| } | |
| description | |
| "The mac-address type represents an IEEE 802 MAC address. | |
| The canonical representation uses lowercase characters. | |
| In the value set and its semantics, this type is equivalent | |
| to the MacAddress textual convention of the SMIv2."; | |
| reference | |
| "IEEE 802: IEEE Standard for Local and Metropolitan Area | |
| Networks: Overview and Architecture | |
| RFC 2579: Textual Conventions for SMIv2"; | |
| } | |
| typedef xpath1.0 { | |
| type string; | |
| description | |
| "This type represents an XPATH 1.0 expression. | |
| When a schema node is defined that uses this type, the | |
| description of the schema node MUST specify the XPath | |
| context in which the XPath expression is evaluated."; | |
| reference | |
| "XPATH: XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0"; | |
| } | |
| typedef hex-string { | |
| type string { | |
| pattern | |
| '([0-9a-fA-F]{2}(:[0-9a-fA-F]{2})*)?'; | |
| } | |
| description | |
| "A hexadecimal string with octets represented as hex digits | |
| separated by colons. The canonical representation uses | |
| lowercase characters."; | |
| } | |
| typedef uuid { | |
| type string { | |
| pattern | |
| '[0-9a-fA-F]{8}-[0-9a-fA-F]{4}-[0-9a-fA-F]{4}-[0-9a-fA-F]{4}-[0-9a-fA-F]{12}'; | |
| } | |
| description | |
| "A Universally Unique IDentifier in the string representation | |
| defined in RFC 4122. The canonical representation uses | |
| lowercase characters. | |
| The following is an example of a UUID in string representation: | |
| f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6 | |
| "; | |
| reference | |
| "RFC 4122: A Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN | |
| Namespace"; | |
| } | |
| typedef dotted-quad { | |
| type string { | |
| pattern | |
| '(([0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])\.){3}([0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])'; | |
| } | |
| description | |
| "An unsigned 32-bit number expressed in the dotted-quad | |
| notation, i.e., four octets written as decimal numbers | |
| and separated with the '.' (full stop) character."; | |
| } | |
| } |