Ip rip port access table, Snrtipripportaccesstable, Snrtipripportaccessport – Brocade Unified IP MIB Reference (Supporting FastIron Releases 07.5.00 and 08.0.10) User Manual
Page 571: Snrtipripportaccessdir, Snrtipripportaccessfilterlist, Snrtipripportaccessrowstat us, Global rip statistics

Unified IP MIB Reference
545
53-1003106-01
IP RIP port access table
52
IP RIP port access table
The IP RIP port access table allows a group of RIP filters to be applied to an IP interface. The filters
can be applied to either incoming or outgoing traffic.
NOTE
The IP RIP port access MIBs are not supported on the Brocade NetIron MLX, Brocade MLXe, Brocade
NetIron XMR, Brocade NetIron CES, Brocade NetIron CER series, and Brocade FastIron devices.
Global RIP statistics
The following objects provide global RIP statistics.
NOTE
The global RIP statistics MIBs are not supported on the Brocade NetIron MLX, Brocade MLXe,
Brocade NetIron XMR, Brocade NetIron CES, Brocade NetIron CER series, and Brocade FastIron
devices.
Name, OID, and syntax
Access
Description
snRtIpRipPortAccessTable
brcdIp.1.2.3.6
None
The IP interface RIP access table.
snRtIpRipPortAccessPort
brcdIp.1.2.3.6.1.1
Syntax: PortIndex
Read-only
The port number to which the IP RIP filter applies.
snRtIpRipPortAccessDir
brcdIp.1.2.3.6.1.2
Syntax: Integer
Read-only
Specifies if the filter is for incoming or outgoing packets:
•
in(1) – Incoming packet
•
out(2) – Outgoing packet
snRtIpRipPortAccessFilterList
brcdIp.1.2.3.6.1.3
Syntax: OCTET STRING
Read-write
Contains an IP RIP filter list.
Valid values: Up to 64 octets. Each octet contains a filter ID number
that consists of a group of filters. Before a filter list can be created,
there must be valid entries in the IP RIP route filter table
(
object) with the corresponding filter ID
object.
snRtIpRipPortAccessRowStat
us
brcdIp.1.2.3.6.1.4
Syntax: Integer
Read-write
Controls the management of the table rows. The following values
can be written:
•
delete(3) – Deletes the row.
•
create(4) – Creates a new row.
•
modify(5) – Modifies an existing row.
If the row exists, then a SET with a value of create(4) returns a "bad
value" error. Deleted rows are removed from the table immediately.
The following values can be returned on reads:
•
noSuch(0) – No such row.
•
invalid(1) – Row is inoperative.
•
valid(2) – Row exists and is valid.