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Current File : //usr/share/mibs/ietf/URI-TC-MIB
URI-TC-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN

IMPORTS
    MODULE-IDENTITY, mib-2             FROM SNMPv2-SMI      -- [RFC2578]
    TEXTUAL-CONVENTION                 FROM SNMPv2-TC;      -- [RFC2579]

uriTcMIB MODULE-IDENTITY
    LAST-UPDATED "200709100000Z" -- 10 September 2007
    ORGANIZATION "IETF Operations and Management (OPS) Area"
    CONTACT-INFO "EMail: ops-area@ietf.org
                  Home page: http://www.ops.ietf.org/"
    DESCRIPTION
            "This MIB module defines textual conventions for
            representing URIs, as defined by RFC 3986 STD 66."
    REVISION     "200709100000Z" -- 10 September 2007
    DESCRIPTION
           "Initial revision, published as RFC 5017.

            Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).  This version of this
            MIB module is part of RFC 5017; see the RFC itself for full



            legal notices."
    ::= { mib-2 164 }

Uri ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   DISPLAY-HINT "1a"
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
            "A Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) as defined by STD 66.

            Objects using this TEXTUAL-CONVENTION MUST be in US-ASCII
            encoding, and MUST be normalized as described by RFC 3986
            Sections 6.2.1, 6.2.2.1, and 6.2.2.2.  All unnecessary
            percent-encoding is removed, and all case-insensitive
            characters are set to lowercase except for hexadecimal
            digits, which are normalized to uppercase as described in
            Section 6.2.2.1.

            The purpose of this normalization is to help provide unique
            URIs.  Note that this normalization is not sufficient to
            provide uniqueness.  Two URIs that are textually distinct
            after this normalization may still be equivalent.

            Objects using this TEXTUAL-CONVENTION MAY restrict the
            schemes that they permit.  For example, 'data:' and 'urn:'
            schemes might not be appropriate.

            A zero-length URI is not a valid URI.  This can be used to
            express 'URI absent' where required, for example when used
            as an index field.

            Where this TEXTUAL-CONVENTION is used for an index field,
            it MUST be subtyped to restrict its length.  There is an
            absolute limit of 128 subids for an OID, and it is not
            efficient to have OIDs whose length approaches this
            limit."
   REFERENCE "RFC 3986 STD 66 and RFC 3305"
   SYNTAX      OCTET STRING

Uri255 ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   DISPLAY-HINT "255a"
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
            "A Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) as defined by STD 66.

            Objects using this TEXTUAL-CONVENTION MUST be in US-ASCII
            encoding, and MUST be normalized as described by RFC 3986
            Sections 6.2.1, 6.2.2.1, and 6.2.2.2.  All unnecessary
            percent-encoding is removed, and all case-insensitive



            characters are set to lowercase except for hexadecimal
            digits, which are normalized to uppercase as described in
            Section 6.2.2.1.

            The purpose of this normalization is to help provide unique
            URIs.  Note that this normalization is not sufficient to
            provide uniqueness.  Two URIs that are textually distinct
            after this normalization may still be equivalent.

            Objects using this TEXTUAL-CONVENTION MAY restrict the
            schemes that they permit.  For example, 'data:' and 'urn:'
            schemes might not be appropriate.

            A zero-length URI is not a valid URI.  This can be used to
            express 'URI absent' where required, for example when used
            as an index field.

            STD 66 URIs are of unlimited length.  Objects using this
            TEXTUAL-CONVENTION impose a length limit on the URIs that
            they can represent.  Where no length restriction is
            required, objects SHOULD use the 'Uri' TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
            instead.  Objects used as indices SHOULD subtype the 'Uri'
            TEXTUAL-CONVENTION."
   REFERENCE "RFC 3986 STD 66 and RFC 3305"
   SYNTAX      OCTET STRING (SIZE (0..255))

Uri1024 ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   DISPLAY-HINT "1024a"
   STATUS      current
   DESCRIPTION
            "A Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) as defined by STD 66.

            Objects using this TEXTUAL-CONVENTION MUST be in US-ASCII
            encoding, and MUST be normalized as described by RFC 3986
            Sections 6.2.1, 6.2.2.1, and 6.2.2.2.  All unnecessary
            percent-encoding is removed, and all case-insensitive
            characters are set to lowercase except for hexadecimal
            digits, which are normalized to uppercase as described in
            Section 6.2.2.1.

            The purpose of this normalization is to help provide unique
            URIs.  Note that this normalization is not sufficient to
            provide uniqueness.  Two URIs that are textually distinct
            after this normalization may still be equivalent.

            Objects using this TEXTUAL-CONVENTION MAY restrict the
            schemes that they permit.  For example, 'data:' and 'urn:'
            schemes might not be appropriate.



            A zero-length URI is not a valid URI.  This can be used to
            express 'URI absent' where required, for example when used
            as an index field.

            STD 66 URIs are of unlimited length.  Objects using this
            TEXTUAL-CONVENTION impose a length limit on the URIs that
            they can represent.  Where no length restriction is
            required, objects SHOULD use the 'Uri' TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
            instead.  Objects used as indices SHOULD subtype the 'Uri'
            TEXTUAL-CONVENTION."
   REFERENCE "RFC 3986 STD 66 and RFC 3305"
   SYNTAX      OCTET STRING (SIZE (0..1024))

END

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