Difference between revisions of "Yuma netconfd Manual"

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== Capabilities ==
 
== Capabilities ==
 
Server capabilities are the primary mechanism to specify optional behavior in the NETCONF protocol. This section describes the capabilities that are supported by the '''netconfd''' server.
 
Server capabilities are the primary mechanism to specify optional behavior in the NETCONF protocol. This section describes the capabilities that are supported by the '''netconfd''' server.
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** type: enumeration (report-all report-all-tagged trim explicit)
 
** type: enumeration (report-all report-all-tagged trim explicit)
 
** This parameter specifies the desired default with-defaults behavior for the session. The server-wide default value is set with the '''--default-style '''configuration parameter.
 
** This parameter specifies the desired default with-defaults behavior for the session. The server-wide default value is set with the '''--default-style '''configuration parameter.
  +
* '''<nowiki><cache-timeout></nowiki>'''
  +
** type: uint32
  +
** units: seconds
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** The time it takes for cached virtual data to expire and be updated. When 0 caching is disabled.
   
 
Possible Operation Errors:
 
Possible Operation Errors:
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Example Request:
 
Example Request:
   
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<nowiki><get-my-session xmlns="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-mysession"/></nowiki>
 
<nowiki><?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> </nowiki>
 
<nowiki><nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" </nowiki>
 
message-id="2">
 
<nowiki><myses:get-my-session xmlns:myses="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/mysession"/> </nowiki>
 
<nowiki></nc:rpc></nowiki>
 
   
 
Example Reply:
 
Example Reply:
   
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<nowiki><rpc-reply xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0">
<nowiki><?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> </nowiki>
 
  +
<indent xmlns="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-mysession">2</indent>
<nowiki><nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" </nowiki>
 
  +
<linesize xmlns="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-mysession">72</linesize>
message-id="2">
 
<nowiki><myses:indent xmlns:myses="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/mysession"></nowiki>
+
<with-defaults xmlns="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-mysession">explicit</with-defaults>
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<cache-timeout xmlns="http://yuma123.org/ns/yuma123-mysession-cache">0</cache-timeout>
3
 
<nowiki></myses:indent> </nowiki>
+
</rpc-reply></nowiki>
<nowiki><myses:linesize xmlns:myses="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/mysession"></nowiki>
 
72
 
<nowiki></myses:linesize> </nowiki>
 
<nowiki><myses:with-defaults xmlns:myses="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/mysession"></nowiki>
 
report-all
 
<nowiki></myses:with-defaults> </nowiki>
 
<nowiki></nc:rpc-reply></nowiki>
 
   
 
=== <get-schema> ===
 
=== <get-schema> ===
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|-
 
|-
 
| Max parameters:
 
| Max parameters:
| 3
+
| 4
   
 
|-
 
|-
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** default: report-all (can be changed with the '''--default-style '''configuration parameter)
 
** default: report-all (can be changed with the '''--default-style '''configuration parameter)
 
** This parameter specifies the desired default with-defaults behavior for the session. The server-wide default value is set with the '''--default-style '''configuration parameter.
 
** This parameter specifies the desired default with-defaults behavior for the session. The server-wide default value is set with the '''--default-style '''configuration parameter.
  +
* '''<nowiki><cache-timeout></nowiki>'''
  +
** type: uint32
  +
** units: seconds
  +
** The time it takes for cached virtual data to expire and be updated. When 0 caching is disabled.
   
 
Returns:
 
Returns:

Latest revision as of 07:07, 24 March 2019

Yuma netconfd Manual


YANG-Based Unified Modular Automation Tools


NETCONF Over SSH Server


Version yuma123-2.12

Contents

Preface

Legal Statements

Copyright 2009 – 2012, Andy Bierman, All Rights Reserved.

Copyright 2013 – 2018, Vladimir Vassilev, All Rights Reserved.

Additional Resources

This document assumes you have successfully set up the software as described in the printed document:

Yuma Installation Guide

Other documentation includes:

Yuma User Manual

Yuma yangcli Manual

Yuma yangdiff Manual

Yuma yangdump Manual

Yuma Developer Manual

There are several sources of free information and tools for use with YANG and/or NETCONF.

The following section lists the resources available at this time.

WEB Sites

Mailing Lists

Conventions Used in this Document

The following formatting conventions are used throughout this document:

Documentation Conventions


Convention
Description
--foo CLI parameter foo
<foo> XML parameter foo
foo yangcli command or parameter
$FOO Environment variable FOO
$$foo yangcli global variable foo
some text Example command or PDU
some text Plain text

netconfd User Guide

netconfd Program Components

[[Image:]]

Introduction

The netconfd program is a NETCONF-over-SSH server implementation. It is driven directly by YANG files, and provides a robust and secure database interface using standard NETCONF protocol operations.

All aspects of NETCONF protocol operation handling can be done automatically by the netconfd server. However, the interface between the NETCONF database and the device instrumentation is not covered in this document. Refer to the server Developers Guide for details on adding YANG module instrumentation code to the netconfd server.


Features

The netconfd server has the following features:

  • Complete implementation of NETCONF versions 1.0 and 1.1
  • Automatic support for all NETCONF operations, including the YANG 'insert' operation.
  • Supports <candidate>, <running>, and <startup> databases
  • Supports the complete NETCONF protocol defined in RFC 4741 and RFC 6241.
  • Supports the complete SSH transport binding defined in RFC 4742 and RFC 6242.
  • Full, automatic run-time support for any YANG-defined NETCONF content:
    • rpc statement automatically supported, so new operations can be added at run-time
    • all YANG data statements automatically supported, so new database objects can be added at run-time
    • notification statement automatically supported, so new notification event types can be added at run-time
  • Complete XML 1.0 implementation with full support for XML Namespaces
  • Automatic support for all capability registration and <hello> message processing
  • Full, automatic generation of all YANG module <capability> contents, including features and deviations
  • Automatic session management, including unlimited number of concurrent sessions, session customization, and all database cleanup
  • Fully recoverable, automatic database editing, using a simple 3 phase callback model
    • 1) validate, 2) apply, 3) commit or rollback
  • Full support for database locking, editing, validation, including extensive user-callback capabilities to support device instrumentation.
  • Automatic support for all YANG validation mechanisms, including all XPath conditionals
  • Automatic subtree and full XPath filtering
  • Automatic confirmed-commit and rollback procedures
  • Automatic database audit log and change notification support
  • Complete <rpc-error> reporting support, including user-defined errors via YANG error-app-tag and error-message statements.
  • Several <rpc-error> extensions, including <bad-value> and <error-number>, for easier debugging
  • Comprehensive, fully NETCONF configurable, access control model, defined in yuma-nacm.yang.
  • Complete RFC 5277 Notification support, including notification replay, :interleave capability, and several useful notifications implemented in yuma-system.yang.
  • Complete RFC 5717 Partial Lock support with full XPath support, and all partial locking monitoring data defined in ietf-netconf-monitoring.yang.
  • Full support for all YANG constructs, including deviations
  • Full support of YANG sub-modules, including nested sub-modules
  • Multiple concurrent module versions supported (import-by-revision)
  • Multiple concurrent submodule versions supported (include-by-revision)
  • Optimized, full XPath 1.0 implementation, including all YANG extensions
  • Full implementation of the ietf-netconf-monitoring data model, including the <get-schema> operation to retrieve YANG or YIN modules from the server.
  • Configurable default node handling, including full support of the <with-defaults> standard, in ietf-with-defaults.yang.
  • System information automatically supported, as defined in yuma-system.yang.
  • Comprehensive logging capabilities for easy debugging during YANG content development or normal operation.
  • Time filtering support for <get> and <get-config> requests with 'modified-since' and 'if-modified-since' per-datastore timestamps.

Setting the Server Profile

The netconfd server can behave in different ways, depending on the initial configuration parameters used.

The following parameters should be considered, and if the default behavior is not desired, then an explicit value should be provided instead:

  • --yuma-home or $YUMA_HOME setting will affect YANG search path.
  • --modpath or $YUMA_MODPATH setting will affect YANG search path.
  • --datapath or $YUMA_DATAPATH setting will affect startup-cfg.xml search path.
  • --target setting will select the edit target. The default is 'candidate', so this parameter must be set to choose 'running' as the edit target.
  • --with-startup setting will enable the <startup> database if set to 'true'.
  • --with-validate setting will enable the :validate capability if set to 'true'
  • --access-control setting will affect how access control is enforced. The default is fully on ('enforcing').
  • --superuser setting will affect access control, if it is enabled. The default is 'superuser'.
  • --default-style setting will affect how default leaf values are returned in retrieval requests. The default is 'trim'. This returns everything except leafs containing the YANG default-stmt value, by default. To report every leaf value by default, set this parameter to 'report-all'. To report only leafs not set by the server by default, use the 'explicit' enumeration.
  • --log and --log-level settings will affect how log messages are generated. The default is to send all messages to STDOUT, and use the 'info' logging level. If the server is a DEBUG image, then the default logging level will be 'debug' instead.
  • --eventlog-size setting will control the memory used by the notification replay buffer
  • --max-burst will control the of notifications sent at once to a single session
  • --hello-timeout will control how long sessions can be stuck waiting for a hello message before they are dropped.
  • -- idle-timeout will control how long active sessions can remain idle before they are dropped.

Loading YANG Modules

The --module parameter can be used from the CLI or .conf file to pre-load YANG modules and any related device instrumentation code into the server. A fatal error will occur if any module cannot be loaded, or it contains any YANG errors.

At run-time, the <load> operation (defined in yuma-system.yang) can be used to do the same thing, except the server will simply return an <rpc-error> instead of terminate, if the requested module cannot be loaded.


Starting netconfd

The current working directory in use when netconfd is invoked is important. It is most convenient to run netconfd in the background, and save all output to a log file.

The netconfd program listens for connection requests on a local socket, that is located in /tmp/ncxserver.sock.

In order for NETCONF sessions to be enabled, the SSH server and the netconf-subsystem programs must be properly installed first.

The netconfd program does not directly process the SSH protocol messages. Instead, it is implemented as an SSH subsystem. The number of concurrent SSH sessions that can connect to the netconfd server at once may be limited by the SSH server configuration. Refer to the Yuma Installation Guide for more details on configuring the SSH server for use with netconfd.


The netconfd program can be invoked several ways:


  • To get the current version and exit:


        netconfd --version


  • To get program help and exit:


        netconfd --help
        netconfd --help --brief
        netconfd --help --full


  • To start the server in the background, set the loggin level to 'debug', and send logging messages to a log file


        netconfd --log-level=debug --log=~/mylog &


  • To start the server interactively, and send all log messages to STDOUT:


        netconfd


  • To start the server interactively, with a new log file:


        netconfd –logfile=mylogfile


  • To start the server interactively, and append to an existing log file:


        netconfd --logfile=mylogfile –log-append
  • To get parameters from a configuration file:


        netconfd –config=/etc/yuma/netconfd.conf

Stopping netconfd

To terminate the netconfd program when running interactively, use the control-C character sequence. This will cause the server to cleanup and terminate gracefully.

The <shutdown> or <restart> operations can also be used to terminate or restart the server. The yuma-nacm.yang access control rules must be configured to allow any user except the 'superuser' account to invoke this operation.

Signal Handling

The server will respond to Unix signals sent to the netconfd process.

If the server is being run in the foreground, then the Control-C character sequence will perform the same action as a SIGINT signal.


Signals Recognized by netconfd


signal
number
description
SIGHUP (Hangup) 1 Restart the server.
SIGINT (Control-C) 2 Shutdown the server.
SIGQUIT 3 Shutdown the server.
SIGILL 4 Shutdown the server.
SIGTRAP 5 Shutdown the server.
SIGABRT 6 Shutdown the server.
SIGKILL 9 Shutdown the server.
SIGPIPE 13 Handle I/O connection error.
SIGTERM 15 Shutdown the server.

The kill command in Unix can be used to send signals to a process running in the background. Refer to the Unix man pages for more details.

Error Handling

All of the error handling requirements specified by the NETCONF protocol, and the YANG language error extensions for NETCONF, are supported automatically by netconfd.

There are 4 categories of error handling done by the server:

  • incoming PDU validation
    • Errors for invalid PDU contents are reported immediately. The server will attempt to find all the errors in the input <rpc> request, and not stop detecting errors after one is found.
    • All machine-readable YANG statements are utilized to automate the detection and reporting of errors.
    • A node that is present, but has a false 'when' statement, is treated as an error.
  • server instrumentation PDU validation
    • Semantic requirements expressed only in description statements will be checked by device instrumentation callbacks. The specific YANG data module should indicate which errors may be reported, and when they should be reported.
  • database validation
    • Several automated tests are performed when a database is validated.
    • If the edit target is the <candidate> configuration, then referential integrity tests are postponed until the <commit> operation is attempted.
    • The specific conditions checked automatically are:
      • referential integrity condition test failed (must)
      • missing leaf (mandatory)
      • missing choice (mandatory)
      • extra container or leaf
      • too few instances of a list or leaf-list (min-elements)
      • too many instances of a list or leaf-list (max-elements)
      • instance not unique (unique)
    • Nodes that are unsupported by the server will automatically be removed from these tests. This can occur in the following ways:
      • node is defined within a feature that is not supported (if-feature)
      • node has conditional existence test that is false (when)
      • nodes derived from a 'uses' statement which has a conditional existence test that is false (when)
      • nodes derived from an 'augment' statement which has a conditional existence test that is false (when)
  • server instrumentation database validation and activation
    • Errors can occur related to the specific YANG data model module, which can only be detected and reported by the server instrumentation.
    • Resource denied errors can occur while the server instrumentation is attempting to activate the networking features associated with some configuration parameters.
    • Instrumentation code can fail for a number of reasons, such as underlying hardware failure or removal.

Module Summary

The following YANG modules are built into the netconfd server, and cannot be loaded manually with the module parameter or <load> operation.


Pre-loaded YANG Modules


module
description
ietf-inet-types standard data types
ietf-netconf-monitoring standard NETCONF monitoring, and the <get-schema> operation
ietf-netconf-partial-lock standard NETCONF <partial-lock> and <partial-unlock> operations
ietf-netconf-with-defaults <with-defaults> extension
ietf-yang-types standard data types
yuma-interfaces network interfaces information
yuma-nacm NETCONF Access Control Model
nc-notifications standard replay notifications
netconfd Server CLI parameters
notifications standard notification operations
yuma-arp ARP configuration and monitoring
yuma-ncx Yuma NETCONF extensions
yuma-app-common Common CLI parameters
yuma-types Yuma common data types
yuma-mysession Get and Set session-specific parameters
yuma-proc /proc file system monitoriing
yuma-system system monitoring, operations, and notifications
yuma-time-filter Get only if datastore changed since a specified timestamp

Notification Summary

The following notification event types are built into the netconfd server:


Pre-loaded Notifications


module
event type
description
nc-notifications <replayComplete> Notification replay has ended
nc-notifications <notificationComplete> Notification delivery has ended
yuma-system <sysStartup> server startup event
yuma-system <sysSessionStart> NETCONF session started
yuma-system <sysSessionEnd> NETCONF session ended
yuma-system <sysConfigChange> <running> configuration has changed
yuma-system <sysCapabilityChange> server capability added or deleted
yuma-system <sysConfirmedCommit> confirmed-commit procedure event

Operation Summary

The following protocol operations are built into the netconfd server:


Pre-loaded Operations


module
operation
description
Ietf-netconf <cancel-commit> Cancel a confirmed-commit operation.
ietf-netconf <close-session> Terminate the current session.
ietf-netconf <commit> Activate edits in <candidate>.
ietf-netconf <copy-config> Copy an entire configuration.
notifications <create-subscription> Start receiving notifications.
ietf-netconf <delete-config> Delete a configuration.
ietf-netconf <discard-changes> Discard edits in <candidate>.
ietf-netconf <edit-config> Edit the target configuration.
ietf-netconf <get> Retrieve <running> or state data.
ietf-netconf <get-config> Retrieve all or part of a configuration.
yuma-mysession <get-my-session> Retrieve session customization parameters.
ietf-netconf-monitoring <get-schema> Retrieve a YANG or YIN module definition file.
ietf-netconf <kill-session> Terminate a NETCONF session.
netconfd <load> Load a YANG module.
ietf-netconf <lock> Lock a database.
netconfd <no-op> No operation.
ietf-netconf-partial-lock <partial-lock> Lock part of the <running> database
ietf-netconf-partial-lock <partial-unlock> Unlock part of the <running> database
netconfd <restart> Restart the server.
yuma-mysession <set-my-session> Set the session customization parameters.
yuma-system <set-log-level> Set the logging verbosity level.
netconfd <shutdown> Shutdown the server.
ietf-netconf <unlock> Unlock a database.
ietf-netconf <validate> Validate a database

Configuration Parameter List

The following configuration parameters are used by netconfd. Refer to the CLI Reference for more details.


netconfd CLI Parameters


parameter
description
--audit-log Specifies the audit log of changes to the running database, after initial load is done.
--audit-log-append Append audit entryies to the existing log is present; Otherwise start a new audit log.
--access-control Specifies how access control will be enforced
--config Specifies the configuration file to use for parameters
--datapath Specifies the search path for the <startup> configuration file.
--default-style Specifies the default <with-defaults> behavior
--delete-empty-npcontainers Specifies that empty NP containers should be deleted or not
--deviation Species one or more YANG modules to load as deviations
--eventlog-size Specifies the maximum number of events stored in the notification replay buffer.
--feature-disable Leaf list of features to disable
--feature-enable Specifies a feature that should be enabled
--feature-enable-default Specifies if a feature should be enabled or disabled by default
--help Get context-sensitive help with --brief or --full extension
--hello-timeout Set the number of seconds to wait for a <hello> PDU
--idle-timeout Set the number of seconds to wait for a <rpc> PDU
--indent Specifies the indent count to use when writing data
--log Specifies the log file to use instead of STDOUT
--log-append Controls whether a log file will be reused or overwritten
--log-level Controls the verbosity of logging messages
--max-burst Specifies the maximum number of notifications to send to one session in a row.
--modpath Sets the module search path
--module Specifies one or more YANG modules to load upon startup
--protocols Specifies which NETCONF protocol versions to enable
--no-startup If present, the startup configuration will not be used (if present), and the factory defaults will be used instead.
--port Specifies up to 4 TCP port numbers to accept NETCONF connections from
--runpath Server instrumentation library (SIL) search path
--running-error Specifies whether the server should stop or continue if the running configuration contains any errors at boot-time (such as missing mandatory nodes)
--startup Specifies the startup configuration file location to override the default. Not allowed if the --no-startup parameter is present.
--startup-error Specifies whether the server should stop or continue if the startup configuration contains any recoverable errors (the bad configuration data can be removed)
--subdirs If true, then sub-directories will be searched when looking for files. Otherwise just the specified directory will be used and none of its sub-directories (if any).
--superuser Specifies the user name (or empty string for none) to be given super user privileges, instead of the default 'superuser'.
--system-sorted Specifies whether system ordered lists and leaf-lists should be maintained in sorted order
--target Specifies if the <candidate> or <running> configuration should be the edit target
--usexmlorder Forces strict YANG XML ordering to be enforced
--version Prints the program version and exits
--warn-idlen Controls how identifier lengths are checked
--warn-linelen Controls how line lengths are checked
--warn-off Suppresses the specified warning number
--with-startup Enable or disable the <startup> database
--with-url Enable or disable the :url capability
--with-validate Enable or disable the :validate capability
--yuma-home Specifies the $YUMA_HOME project root to use when searching for files

Capabilities

Server capabilities are the primary mechanism to specify optional behavior in the NETCONF protocol. This section describes the capabilities that are supported by the netconfd server.

:base:1.0

The :base:1.0 capability indicates that the RFC 4741 version of the NETCONF protocol is supported.

This capability can be controlled with the –protocols CLI parameter.

This capability is supported by default.

:base:1.1

The :base:1.1 capability indicates that the RFC 6241 version of the NETCONF protocol is supported.

This capability can be controlled with the –protocols CLI parameter.

This capability is supported by default.

:candidate

The :candidate capability indicates that database edits will be done to the <candidate> database, and saved with the <commit> operation.

The <candidate> configuration is a shared scratch-pad, so it should be used with the locking. Database edits are collected in the <candidate> and then applied, all or nothing, to the <running> database, with the <commit> operation.

This capability is supported by default. It is controlled by the --target configuration parameter (--target=candidate).

By default, only the superuser account can use the <delete-config> operation on the <candidate> configuration.

:confirmed-commit

The :confirmed-commit capability indicates that the server will support the <confirmed> and <confirm-timeout> parameters to the <commit> operation. If the 'base:1.1' protocol version is in use, then the <persist> and <persist-id> parameters are also supported.

The confirmed commit procedure requires that two <commit> operations be used to apply changes from the candidate configuration to the running configuration.

If the second <commit> operation is not received before the <confirm-timeout> value (default 10 minutes), then the running and candidate configurations will be reset to the contents of the running configuration, before the first <commit> operation.

If the session that started the confirmed-commit procedure is terminated for any reason before the second <commit> operation is completed, then the running configuration will be reset, as if the confirm-timeout interval had expired.

If the confirmed-commit procedure is used, and the :startup capability is also supported, then the contents of NV-storage (e.g., startup-cfg.xml) will not be updated or altered by this procedure. Only the running configuration will be affected by the rollback,

If the <confirmed> parameter is used again, in the second <commit> operation, then the timeout interval will be extended, and any changes made to the candidate configuration will be committed. If the running and candidate configurations are reverted, any intermediate edits made since the first <commit> operation will be lost.

:interleave

The :interleave capability indicates that the server will accept <rpc> requests other than <close-session> during notification delivery. It is supported at all times, and cannot be configured.

:netconf-monitoring

The :netconf-monitoring capability indicates that the /ietf-netconf-monitoring data sub-tree is supported.

The netconfd server supports all of the tables in this module, except partial-locking, because the :partial-lock capability is not supported at this time.

The /netconf-state/capabilities subtree can be examined to discover the active set of NETCONF capabilities.

The /netconf-state/datastores subtree can be examined to discover the active database locks.

The /netconf-state/schemas subtree can be examined for all the YANG modules that are available for download with the <get-schema> operation.

The /netconf-state/sessions subtree can be examined for monitoring NETCONF session activity.

The /netconf-state/statistics subtree can be examined for monitoring global NETCONF counters.

:notification

The :notification capability indicates that the server will accept the <create-subscription> operation, and deliver notifications to the session, according to the subscription request.

All <create-subscription> options and features are supported.

A notification log is maintained on the server, which is restarted every time the server reboots.

This log can be accessed as a 'replay subscription'.

The first notification in the log will be for the <sysStartup> event.

The <replayComplete> and <notificationComplete> event types are not stored in the log.

:partial-lock

The :partial-lock capability indicates that RFC 5717 is implemented, and partial locking of the <running> database is supported.

The <copy-config> operation is not supported using the <running> database as a target, so partial locks do not affect that operation.

The <edit-config> operation on the <running> database is allowed if the --target parameter is set to 'running'.

The <commit> operation will fail if any portion of the altered configuration is locked by another session. Data in the <candidate> database which is identical to the corresponding data in the <running> configuration is not affected by a <partial-lock> operation.

The constant VAL_MAX_PLOCKS in ncx/val.h controls the maximum number of concurrent locks that a single session can own on a database node. The default value is 4.

There is no hard resource limit for:

  • the number of total partial-locks
  • the number of <select> parameters in the <partial-lock> request
  • the number of nodes that can be locked by a single partial-lock

When the maximum <lock-id> is reached (MAX_UINT), the server will not reset the <lock-id> to '1' unless there are no partial locks currently held on the <running> database. The <lock-id> '0' is not used.

:rollback-on-error

The :rollback-on-error capability indicates that the server supports 'all-or-nothing' editing for a single <edit-config> operation. This is a standard enumeration value for the <error-option> parameter.

The server will perform all PDU validation no matter what <error-option> is selected.

Execution phase will not occur if any errors at all are found in the validation phase.

During execution phase, this parameter will affect error processing. When set to rollback-on-error, if any part of the requested configuration change cannot be performed, the database will be restored to its previous state, and server instrumentation callbacks to 'undo' any changes made will be invoked.

:schema-retrieval

The :schema-retrieval capability indicates that the <get-schema> operation is supported.

The netconfd server supports this operation for all YANG modules in use at the time.

The <identifier> parameter must be set to the name of the YANG module.

The <format> parameter must be set to 'YANG'.

The <version> parameter must be set to a revision date to retrieve a specific version of the module, or the empty string to retrieve whatever version the server is using.

:startup

The :startup capability indicates that the <startup> configuration is supported by the server.

By default, this capability is not supported.

This capability is controlled by the --with-startup configuration parameter. If this parameter is set to 'true', then the :startup capability will be supported.

If this capability is supported:

  • the server will allow the <startup> configuration to be the source of a <get-config>.
  • the server will allow the <startup> configuration to be the target of a <copy-config> operation, if the source is the <running> configuration.
  • If the :validate capability is enabled, then the server will allow the <startup> configuration to be the target of a <validate> operation.
  • If the user is the super user account, or access is configured in NACM to allow it, then the server will allow the <startup> configuration to be the target of a <delete-config> operation.

No other operations on the <startup> database are supported. The <startup> database cannot be edited with <edit-config>, or over-written with <copy-config>.

:validate

The :validate capability indicates that the <validate> operation is accepted, and the <test-option> for the <edit-config> operation is also accepted, by the server.

Versions supported:

  • validate:1.0
  • validate:1.1

This capability is controlled by the --with-validate configuration parameter. If it is set to 'false' then this capability will not be available in netconfd.

The <validate> operation can be invoked in several ways:

  • validate the <candidate> database if the :candidate capability is supported
  • validate the <running> database
  • validate the <startup> database if the :startup capability is supported
  • validate an inline <config> element, which represents the entire contents of a database.

The <test-option> parameter for the <edit-config> operation can be used. This parameter has a significant impact on operations, and needs to be used carefully.

  • set: This option is not the default, but it is probably the desired behavior for the <candidate> database. In order to fully utilize the incremental editing capability of this database, the 'set' value should be used. This will prevent any validation error messages unrelated to the current edit. The <validate> operation can be used before the <commit> is done, if desired. The same errors (if any) should be reported by <validate> or <commit>.
  • test-then-set: This option is the default, and will cause a resource intensive validation procedure to be invoked every time the <candidate> database is edited. (The validation procedure is always invoked on every edit to the <running> configuration.) If any database validation errors are found (in addition to the requested edit), then they will be reported. Use the <error-path> field to determine which type of error is being reported by the server.

:url

The :url capability indicates that the server accepts the <url> parameter in NETCONF operations that use this parameter. This capability can be disabled with the --with-url CLI configuration parameter.

The following operations are affected by the :url capability:

  • edit-config
    • <url> accepted instead of <config> as a configuration data source
  • copy-config
    • <url> accepted as a source parameter.
    • <url> accepted as a target paramter.
    • <url> to <url> copy not supported (optional to implement)
  • delete-config:
    • <url> accepted as source to delete
  • validate
    • <url> accepted as a configuration source to validate.

Only the 'file' scheme is supported at this time.

A URL file can be specified as a simple file within the root directory.

No whitespace or special characters are allowed in the file name.

The file extension '.xml' should be used. The server only generates and expects XML configuration files. The NETCONF 'config' element is used as the top-level element in all <url> files.

The $YUMA_DATAPATH environment variable or the $$datapth system variable is used to find the file names specified in the <url> URI string.

Example:

    <url>[../../../../../../../my-backup.xml file:///my-backup.xml]</url>

:with-defaults

The :with-defaults capability indicates that the server will accept the <with-defaults> parameter for the following operations:

  • <get>
  • <get-config>
  • <copy-config>

There are 4 values defined for this parameter. The server supports all of them, no matter what mode is used for the default style.

  • report-all: all nodes are reported
  • report-all-tagged: all nodes are reported with an XML attribute indicating the nodes which are considered default nodes by the server.
  • trim: nodes set to thier YANG default-stmt value by the server or the client are skipped
  • explicit: nodes set by the server are skipped. (Nodes set in the <startup> are considered to be set by the client, not the server.)

The --default-style configuration parameter is used to control the behavior the server will use for these operations when the <with-defaults> parameter is missing. The server will also use this default value when automatically saving the <running> configuration to non-volatile storage.


:writable-running

The :writable-running capability indicates that the server uses the <running> configuration as its edit target. In this case, the <target> parameter for the <edit-config> operation can only be set to <running/>.

All edits are activated immediately, but only if the entire database is going to be valid after the edits. A non-destructive test is performed before activating the requested changes.

If this capability is advertised, then netconfd will also advertise the :startup capability. They are always used together.

Edits to the <running> configuration take affect right away, but they are only saved to non-volatile storage automatically if the with-startup configuration parameter is set to 'false'.

:xpath

The :xpath capability indicates that XPath filtering is supported for the <get> and <get-config> operations.

The netconfd server implements all of XPath 1.0, plus the following additions:

  • the current() function from XPath 2.0 is supported
  • a missing XML namespace will match any YANG module namespace (XPath 2.0 behavior) instead of matching the NULL namespace (XPath 1.0 behavior)
  • the 'preceding' and 'following' axes should not be used. The database is dynamic and the relative document order is not stable. This is also a very resource intensive operation.

XPath filtering affects whether the server will return particular subtrees or not. It does not change the format of the <get> or <get-config> output. The result returned by the server will not be the raw XPath node-set from evaluating the specified 'select' expression against a database.

The server will normalize the XPath search results it returns:

  • There will be no duplicate nodes, even if there were duplicates in the XPath result node-set.
  • All result nodes with common ancestor nodes will be grouped together in the <rpc-reply>.
  • All list nodes will include child nodes for any missing key leafs, even if they were not requested in the 'select' expression.

Databases

A NETCONF database is conceptually represented as an XML instance document.

There are 3 conceptual databases, which all share the exact same structure.

  • <candidate>: scratch-pad to gather edits to apply to <running> all at once
  • <running>: configuration data in effect
  • <startup>: configuration data for the next reboot

When the <running> configuration is saved to non-volatile storage, the top-level element of this document is the <config> container element.

The XML namespace of this element is the netconfd module namespace, but a client application should expect that other server implementations may use a different namespace, such as the NETCONF namespace, or perhaps no namespace at all for this top-level element.

When database contents are returned in the <get>, <get-config>, or <copy-config> operations, the top-level container will be the <data> element in the NETCONF base namespace.

The top-level YANG module data structures that are present in the configuration will be present as child nodes of the <config> or <data> container node.

The exact databases that are present in the server are controlled by 3 capabilities:

  • :candidate
  • :writable-running
  • :startup

The edit target in the server is set with the --target configuration parameter. This will select either the :candidate or :writable-running capabilities.

The server behavior for non-volatile storage of the <running> configuration is set with the --with-startup configuration parameter. The :startup capability will be supported if this parameter is set to 'true'.

The following diagram shows the 4 database usage modes that netconfd supports:


[[Image:]]

Database Locking

It is strongly suggested that the <lock> and <unlock> operations be used whenever a database is being edited. All the databases on the server should be locked, not just one, because different operations are controlled by different locks. The only way to insure that the entire database transaction is done in isolation is to keep all the databases locked during the entire transaction.

The affected configurations should be locked during the entire transaction, and not released until the edits have been saved in non-volatile storage.

If the edit target is the <candidate> configuration, then the <candidate> and <running> configurations should be locked.

If the edit target is the <running> configuration, then the <running> and <startup> configurations should be locked.

Whenever the lock on the <candidate> configuration is released, a <discard-changes> operation is performed by the server. This is required by the NETCONF protocol.

Of the <candidate> configuration contains any edits, then a lock will fail with a 'resource-denied' error. In this case, a lock on the <candidate> configuration cannot be granted until the <discard-changes> operation is completed.

Using the <candidate> Database

The <candidate> database is available if the :candidate capability is advertised by the server.

The <lock> operation will fail on this database if there are any edits already pending in the <candidate>. If a 'lock-failed' error occurs and no session is holding a lock, then use the <discard-changes> operation to clear the <candidate> buffer of any edits.

Once all the edits have been made, the <validate> operation can be used to check if all database validation tests will pass. This step is optional.

Once the edits are completed, the <commit> operation is used to activate the configuration changes, and save them in non-volatile storage.

The <discard-changes> operation is used to clear any edits from this database.

Using the <running> Database

The <running> database is available at all times for reading.

If the :writable-running capability is advertised by the server, then this database will be available as the target for <edit-config> operations.

Edits to the <running> configuration will take affect right away, as each <edit-config> operation is completed.

Once all the edits are completed, the <copy-config> operation can be used to save the current <running> configuration to non-volatile storage, by setting the target of the <copy-config> operation to the <startup> configuration.

Using the <startup> Database

The <startup> database is available if the :startup capability is advertised by the server.

The <copy-config> operation can be used to save the contents of the <running> configuration to the <startup> configuration.

The <get-config> operation can be used to retrieve the contents of the <startup> configuration.

The <delete-config> operation can be used to delete the <startup> configuration. Only the superuser account is allowed to do this, by default.

Sessions

All NETCONF server access is done through the NETCONF protocol, except the server can be shutdown with the Control-C character sequence if it being run interactively.

This section describes any netconfd implementation details which may NETCONF sessions.


User Names

The user name string associated with a NETCONF session is derived from the $SSH_CONNECTION environment variable, which is available to the netconf-subsystem program when it is called by sshd.

Any user name accepted by sshd will be accepted by netconfd.

In order for access control to work properly, the sshd user name must also conform to the NacmUserName type definition:


    typedef NacmUserName {
        description "General Purpose User Name string.";
        type string {
        length "1..63";
        pattern '[a-z,A-Z][a-z,A-Z,0-9]{0,62}';
        }
    }


  • A user name cane be 1 to 63 characters long.
  • The first character must be a letter ['a' to 'z', or 'A' to 'Z']
  • The remaining characters must be a letter ['a' to 'z', or 'A' to 'Z'], or a number ['0' to '9'].

Session ID

The <session-id> assigned by the server is simply a monotonically increasing number:


    typedef SessionId {
        description "NETCONF Session Id";
        type uint32 {
        range "1..max"; 
        }
    }

The server will start using session ID values over again at 1, if the maximum session-id value is ever reached.

Server <hello> Message

The netconfd server will send a <hello> message if a valid SSH2 session to the netconf subsystem is established.

The server will list all the capabilities it supports.

The YANG module capability URI format is supported for all modules, including ones that only contain typedefs or groupings.

The URI format is defined in the YANG specification, and follows this format:


    <module-namespace>?module=<module-name>&revision=<module-date>


If the module does not have any revision statements, then the revision field will not be present in the module capability URI.

If the module contains any supported features, then the following field will be added, and each supported feature name will be listed:


    &features=<feature-name>[,<feature-name>]*


If the module needs any external deviations applied, then the following field will be added, and each deviation module name will be listed:


    &deviations=<deviation-module-name>[,<deviation-module-name>]*


Note that the deviation modules will be listed in the capabilities, along with other modules. The 'deviations' extension allows a client tool to know that the deviations apply to the specific module, since special processing may be required.


Example server <hello> Message:


<nc:hello xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0"> 
   <nc:capabilities> 
      <nc:capability>urn:ietf:params:netconf:base:1.0</nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:netconf:capability:candidate:1.0 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:netconf:capability:confirmed-commit:1.0 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:netconf:capability:rollback-on-error:1.0 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:netconf:capability:validate:1.0 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:netconf:capability:xpath:1.0 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:netconf:capability:notification:1.0 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:netconf:capability:interleave:1.0 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:netconf:capability:with-defaults:1.0?basic=explicit&supported=report-all:trim 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:netconf:capability:netconf-monitoring:1.0 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:netconf:capability:schema-retrieval:1.0 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:inet-types?module=ietf-inet-types&revision=2009-05-13 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:monitoring?module=ietf-netconf-monitoring&revision=2009-06-16 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:netconf:capability:with-defaults:1.0?module=ietf-with-defaults&revision=2009-07-01&features=with-defaults 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:yang-types?module=ietf-yang-types&revision=2009-05-13 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-interfaces?module=interfaces&revision=2009-07-17 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-mysession?module=yuma-mysession&revision=2009-08-11 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-nacm?module=yuma-nacm&revision=2009-05-13 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netmod:notification?module=nc-notifications&revision=2008-07-14 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-ncx?module=yuma-ncx&revision=2009-06-12 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-app-common?module=yuma-app-common&revision=2009-04-10 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-types?module=yuma-types&revision=2008-07-20 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         http://netconfcentral.org/ns/netconfd?module=netconfd&revision=2009-05-28 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:notification:1.0?module=notifications&revision=2008-07-14 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-proc?module=yuma-proc&revision=2009-07-17 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-system?module=yuma-system&revision=2009-06-04 
      </nc:capability> 
      <nc:capability> 
         http://netconfcentral.org/ns/test?module=test&revision=2009-06-10&features=feature1,feature3,feature4 
      </nc:capability> 
   </nc:capabilities> 
   <nc:session-id>1</nc:session-id> 
</nc:hello>]]>]]> 

Client <hello> Message

The netconfd server requires a valid <hello> message from the client before accepting any <rpc> requests.

Only the mandatory 'netconf base' URIs will be checked by the server. All other <capability> elements will be ignored by the server.

The server can be configured with the –protocols CLI parameter to enable the 'base:1.0', and/or the 'base:1.1' NETCONF protocol versions. Both the client and server send the 'base:1.x' (where 'x' is '1' or '2') URIs they support (1 or 2 <capability> elements). The highest version in common determines the protocol version used for the session. If there are no common versions found, the session will be dropped. By default, the server will enable both protocol versions.

The following table shows the outcomes of all possible <hello> processing scenarios:


Client <hello>
Server <hello>
Outcome
[ none ] [ any combination ] Session dropped
[ base:1.0 ] [ base:1.0 ] base:1.0 session started
[ base:1.1 ] [ base:1.0 ] Session dropped
[ base:1.0 base:1.1] [ base:1.0 ] base:1.0 session started
[ base:1.0 ] [ base:1.1 ] Session dropped
[ base:1.1 ] [ base:1.1 ] base:1.1 session started
[ base:1.0 base:1.1] [ base:1.1 ] base:1.1 session started
[ base:1.0 ] [ base:1.0 base:1.1 ] base:1.0 session started
[ base:1.1 ] [ base:1.0 base:1.1 ] base:1.1 session started
[ base:1.0 base:1.1] [ base:1.0 base:1.1 ] base:1.1 session started

Example client <hello> Message:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<nc:hello xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0">
   <nc:capabilities>
     <nc:capability>urn:ietf:params:netconf:base:1.0</nc:capability>
   </nc:capabilities>
</nc:hello>

RPC Request Processing

The only PDU the netconfd server will accept during a NETCONF session is the <rpc> message.

All aspects of NETCONF protocol conformance are supported for contents of the <rpc> elements:

  • All XML attributes in the <rpc> start tag will be returned to the client (unchanged) in the <rpc-reply> element. The order of the XML attributes may not be preserved.
  • All XML namespace prefix assignments declared in the <rpc> element (via the 'xmlns' attribute) will be used within the <rpc-reply>, and most descendant nodes of the <rpc-reply. The exception is the <error-path> element, which may use the default XML prefix for a given module, by declaring a new xmlns attribute for the namespace.
  • The so-called mandatory 'message-id' attribute is ignored by the server, along will all other XML attributes in the <rpc> element. The server will not generate an error if this attribute is missing, as specified in RFC 4741. The new version of the NETCONF protocol removes this rule.

All <rpc> element contents must be declared within the proper namespace, except the contents of a subtree <filter> element for a <get> or <get-config> operation.

Access control will be enforced as follows:

  • All <rpc> operation requests except <close-session> will be checked in the access control model (yuma-nacm.yang). This operation can always be invoked by any user, to allow graceful session termination in all cases.
  • If the user name for the session matches the --superuser configuration parameter, then the operation will always be allowed.
  • If the access control 'no-rule' default for RPC execution is set to 'permit', and there is no access control rule found to match the current <rpc> request, the the operation will always be allowed. The default for this parameter is 'permit'.
  • If a matching access control rule is found, execution access will be permitted or denied, based on the specific rule. (I.e., 'exec' privilege bit set or not).
  • If the operation reads or writes any database data, then the access control model will be checked again, for each database node specified in the request.
    • If the operation is requesting read access, then any nodes for which read permission is not granted will simply be skipped in the result. No error or warning will be reported.
    • If the operation is requesting write access, then any nodes for which write permission is not granted will cause an 'access-denied' error.

The server does not generate inline <rpc-error> elements at this time, for any runtime exceptions that occur while retrieving data for a <get>, <get-config>, or <copy-config> operation. Instead, unavailable nodes are just skipped.

A future version will support this feature, so managers should expect that <rpc-error> might appear within the data in a reply, not just a child node of the <rpc-reply> element.


Session Termination

A session can terminate for several reasons:

  • <close-session> operation invoked
  • <kill-session> operation invoked
  • SSH session terminated unexpectedly
  • TCP connection terminated unexpectedly

When a session terminates, the server does the following:

  • will release any locks the session had (if any)
  • will discard all changes in the <candidate> configuration, if this database was locked by the session.
  • will remove the <session> list entry from the /netconf-state/sessions container
  • will generate a <sysSessionEnd> notification entry for the closed or killed session

Error Reporting

All errors are reported using the standard <rpc-error> element.

If the operation does not return any data, then the <rpc-reply> element will either contain 1 <ok/> element, or 1 or more <rpc-error> elements.

If the operation returns any data (i.e., the YANG rpc definition for the operation has an 'output' section), then the <rpc-reply> element may have both <rpc-error> and data elements within it. If there were errors in the input, then only 1 or more <rpc-error> elements will be returned. It is possible that the required data will be returned, after any errors, but not likely.

The internal netconfd error code for each <rpc-error> is returned in an <error-info> extension called <error-number>.

Normally, the same <error-app-tag> and <error-message> values are returned for a specific error number. However, some YANG errors allow these fields to be user-defined. If there is a user-defined <error-app-tag> and/or <error-message> values, then they will be used instead of the default values.

This section describes the netconfd implementation details which may affect <rpc-error> processing by a client application.

<error-severity> Element

The <error-severity> field will always be set to 'error'. There are no warnings generated by netconfd.

<error-tag> Element

All NETCONF <error-tag> enumerations are supported, except 'partial-operation'. This error is being deprecated in the standard because nobody has implemented it.

If this field is set to 'invalid-value', then the <bad-value> element should be present in the <error-info>, identifying the invalid value that caused the problem.

All standard <error-info> contents are supported. The following table summarizes the different <error-tag> values. The <error-number> parameter is not shown in the 'error-info' column because it is added for every error-tag.


<error-tag> Summary


error-tag
error-info
description
access-denied none NACM denied access
bad-attribute <bad-attribute><bad-element><bad-value> just for the few attributes used in NETCONF
bad-element <bad-element><bad-value> sometimes used instead of invalid-value
data-exists none nc:operation='create'
data-missing none nc:operation='delete' or'replace'
in-use none edit on locked database
invalid-value <bad-value> for typedef constraints
lock-denied <session-id> for <lock> only
missing-attribute <bad-attribute> just for the few attributes used in NETCONF
missing-element <bad-element> mandatory parameters
operation-not-supported none unsupported, false if-feature inside rpc
operation-failed none when no other error-tag applies
partial-operation <ok-element><err-element><noop-element> not implemented
resource-denied none malloc failed
rollback-failed none rollback-on-error failed
too-big none input too big to buffer
unknown-attribute <bad-attribute><bad-element> for any non-NETCONF attributes found
unknown-element <bad-element> wrong element name in a known namespace
unknown-namespace <bad-element> module not loaded
malformed-message None base:1.1 framing lost in transport layer

<error-app-tag> Element

The <error-app-tag> field provided a more specific error classification than the <error-tag> field. It is included in every <rpc-error> response.

This field is encoded as a simple string.

It is possible that error-app-tag values from different vendors will use the same string. A client application needs to account for this shared namespace.

If the YANG 'error-app-tag' statement is defined for the specific error that occured, then it will be used instead of the default value.

The following table describes the default <error-app-tag> values used by netconfd:


<error-app-tag> Summary


error-app-tag
description
data-incomplete the input parameters are incomplete
data-invalid one or more input parameters are invalid
data-not-unique unique statement violation (YANG, sec. 13.1)
duplicate-error trying to create a duplicate list or leaf-list entry
general-error no other description fits
instance-required missing mandatory node (YANG, sec. 13.5)
internal-error internal software error
io-error NETCONF session IO error
libxml2-error libxml2 internal error or parsing error
limit-reached some sort of defined limit was reached
malloc-error malloc function call failed
missing-choice mandatory choice not found (YANG, sec. 13.6)
missing-instance mandatory leaf not found (YANG, sec. 13.7)
must-violation must expression is false (YANG, sec. 13.4)
no-access access control violation
no-matches <get-schema> module or revision search failed
no-support operation or sub-operation not implemented
not-in-range YANG range test failed
not-in-value-set YANG enumeration or bits name is invalid
pattern-test-failed YANG pattern test failed
recover-failed commit or rollback-on-error failed to leave the target database unchanged
resource-in-use in-use error or <create-subscription> while a subscription is already active
ssh-error SSH transport error
too-few-elements min-elements violation (YANG, sec. 13.3)
too-many-elements max-elements violation (YANG, sec. 13.2)

<error-path> Element

The <error-path> field indicates the node that caused the error.

It is encoded as a YANG instance-identifier.

If the node that caused the error is within the incoming <rpc> request, then the error path will start with the <rpc> element, and contain all the node identifiers from this document root to the node that caused the error.


<error-path>
    /nc:rpc/nc:edit-config/nc:config/nacm:nacm/nacm:groups/nacm:group
</error-path>

The 'xmlns' attributes which define the 'nc' and 'nacm' prefixes would be present in the <rpc-reply> or the <rpc-error> element start tags.

If the node that caused the error is not within the incoming <rpc> request, then the error path will start with the top-level YANG module element that contains the error, not the <rpc> element.


This extended usage of the <error-path> field is defined in the YANG specification, not the NETCONF specification. This situation will occur if <validate> or <commit> operations detect errors. It can also occur if the <test-option> for the <edit-config> operation is 'test-then-set', and errors unrelated to the provided in-line <config> content are reported. and contain all the node identifiers from this document root to the node that caused the error.


<error-path>
    /nacm:nacm/nacm:groups/nacm:group[name='admin']/groupIdentity
</error-path>

<error-message> Element

The <error-message> field provides a short English language description of the error that usually corresponds to the <error-number> field.

If the YANG <error-message> statement is available for the error that occurred, it will be used instead of the default error message.

<error-info> Element

The <error-info> container is used to add error-specific data to the error report.

There are some standard elements that are returned for specific errors, and some elements specific to the netconfd server.

<error-info> Summary


child node
description
<bad-attribute> name of the XML attribute that caused the error
<bad-element> name of the element that caused the error or contains the attribute that caused the error
<bad-value> value that caused the error
<error-number> internal error number for the error condition
<missing-choice> name of the missing mandatory YANG choice
<session-id> session number of the current lock holder

instance-required Error Example

The instance-required error-app-tag is generated when a YANG leaf is mandatory, but was not set. An error will be returned right away if the target is the <running> configuration, or if the (default) test-then-set option is used for the <test-option>. Otherwise, this error is generated when the <commit> operation is invoked.


instance-required


data
description
error-tag data-missing
error-app-tag instance-required
error-path identifies the leaf that is missing
error-info none
error-number 310

Example Request:

  • create /test2 (?s used to skip the mandatory <a2> leaf, but the <foo> leaf is set)


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="2"> 
   <nc:edit-config> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:target> 
      <nc:default-operation>none</nc:default-operation> 
      <nc:config> 
         <t:test2  nc:operation="create" 
            xmlns:t="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/test"> 
            <t:foo>xxx</t:foo> 
         </t:test2> 
      </nc:config> 
   </nc:edit-config> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Error Reply:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="2" xmlns:t="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/test" 
   xmlns:ncx="http://netconfcentral.org/ncx"> 
   <nc:rpc-error> 
      <nc:error-type>application</nc:error-type> 
      <nc:error-tag>data-missing</nc:error-tag> 
      <nc:error-severity>error</nc:error-severity> 
      <nc:error-app-tag>instance-required</nc:error-app-tag> 
      <nc:error-path>/t:test2/t:a2</nc:error-path> 
      <nc:error-message xml:lang="en">required value instance not found</nc:error-message> 
      <nc:error-info> 
         <ncx:error-number>310</ncx:error-number> 
      </nc:error-info> 
   </nc:rpc-error> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

missing-choice Error Example

The missing-choice error is generated when a YANG choice is mandatory, but no case from the choice was set. An error will be returned right away if the target is the <running> configuration, or if the (default) test-then-set option is used for the <test-option>. Otherwise, this error is generated when the <commit> operation is invoked.


missing-choice error


data
description
error-tag data-missing
error-app-tag missing-choice
error-path identifies the parent of the missing choice
error-info <missing-choice>
error-number 296

Example Request:

  • create --target=/musttest (?s skip the mandatory choice)
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="2"> 
   <nc:edit-config> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:target> 
      <nc:default-operation>none</nc:default-operation> 
      <nc:config> 
         <t:musttest  nc:operation="create" 
            xmlns:t="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/test"/> 
      </nc:config> 
   </nc:edit-config> 
</nc:rpc>]

Example Error Reply:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="2" xmlns:t="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/test" 
   xmlns:ncx="http://netconfcentral.org/ncx"> 
   <nc:rpc-error xmlns:y="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:1"> 
      <nc:error-type>application</nc:error-type> 
      <nc:error-tag>data-missing</nc:error-tag> 
      <nc:error-severity>error</nc:error-severity> 
      <nc:error-app-tag>missing-choice</nc:error-app-tag> 
      <nc:error-path>/t:musttest</nc:error-path> 
      <nc:error-message xml:lang="en">missing mandatory choice</nc:error-message> 
      <nc:error-info> 
         <y:missing-choice xmlns:y="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:1">musttest</y:missing-choice> 
         <ncx:error-number>296</ncx:error-number> 
      </nc:error-info> 
   </nc:rpc-error> 
</nc:rpc-reply>


no-matches Error Example

The no-matches error is generated when parameters for the <get-schema> operation identify a non-existent YANG file.


No Matches


data
description
error-tag operation-failed
error-app-tag no-matches
error-path identifies the <identifier> or <revision> parameter in the <get-schema> request
error-info <bad-value>
error-number 365

Example Request:

  • get-schema identifier=foo version= format=yang


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="3"> 
   <ns:get-schema xmlns:ns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:state"> 
      <ns:identifier>foo</ns:identifier> 
      <ns:version/> 
      <ns:format>ns:yang</ns:format> 
   </ns:get-schema> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Error Reply:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="3" xmlns:ns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:state" 
   xmlns:ncx="http://netconfcentral.org/ncx"> 
   <nc:rpc-error> 
      <nc:error-type>protocol</nc:error-type> 
      <nc:error-tag>operation-failed</nc:error-tag> 
      <nc:error-severity>error</nc:error-severity> 
      <nc:error-app-tag>no-matches</nc:error-app-tag> 
      <nc:error-path>/nc:rpc/ns:get-schema/ns:input/ns:identifier</nc:error-path> 
      <nc:error-message xml:lang="en">no matches found</nc:error-message> 
      <nc:error-info> 
         <ncx:bad-value>foo</ncx:bad-value> 
         <ncx:error-number>365</ncx:error-number> 
      </nc:error-info> 
   </nc:rpc-error> 
</nc:rpc-reply>


not-in-range Error Example

The not-in-range error is generated when a numeric type viaolates a YANG range statement.


not-in-range


data
description
error-tag invalid-value
error-app-tag not-in-range
error-path identifies the leaf or leaf-list node that is not in range
error-info <bad-value>
error-number 288

Example Request:

  • create /int8.1 value=1000
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="4"> 
   <nc:edit-config> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:target> 
      <nc:default-operation>none</nc:default-operation> 
      <nc:config> 
         <t:int8.1  nc:operation="create" 
            xmlns:t="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/test">1000</t:int8.1> 
      </nc:config> 
   </nc:edit-config> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Error Reply:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="4"> 
   <nc:edit-config> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:target> 
      <nc:default-operation>none</nc:default-operation> 
      <nc:config> 
         <t:int8.1  nc:operation="create" 
            xmlns:t="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/test">1000</t:int8.1> 
      </nc:config> 
   </nc:edit-config> 
</nc:rpc> 


Protocol Operations

This section describes the netconfd implementation details that may affect usage of the NETCONF protocol operations.

Every protocol operation is defined with a YANG rpc statement.

All NETCONF operations and several proprietary operations are supported,

<cancel-commit>

The <cancel-commit> operation is used to cancel a confirmed commit procedure in progress.

A <sysSessionEnd> notification with a <terminationReason> field set to 'closed' will be generated when this operation is invoked.


<cancel-commit> operation


Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 1
Return type: status
YANG file: ietf-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: base:1.1

Mandatory Parameters:

  • none

Optional Parameters:

  • persist:If the 'persist' string was provided in the <commit> operation, then this parameter must be present, and the value must match. Only the session that started the confirmed commit can use this operation without providing a 'persist' parameter.

Returns:

  • <ok/>; an <rpc-reply> will be sent to the session before terminating the session.

Possible Operation Errors:

  • none

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="2"> 
   <nc:cancel-commit>
     <nc:persist>mycommit</nc:persist>
   </nc:cancel-commit>
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="2"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<close-session>

The <close-session> operation is always allowed, even if access control rules exist which somehow disallow 'exec' privileges to a session for this operation.

A <sysSessionEnd> notification with a <terminationReason> field set to 'closed' will be generated when this operation is invoked.


<close-session> operation


Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 0
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: none

Mandatory Parameters:

  • none

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • <ok/>; an <rpc-reply> will be sent to the session before terminating the session.

Possible Operation Errors:

  • none

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="2"> 
   <nc:close-session/> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="2"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<commit>

The <commit> operation is only available when the :candidate capability is supported.

The parameters are only supported if the :confirmed-commit capability is supported.

This operation causes all the edits in the <candidate> configuration to be applied to the <running> configuration. If there are no edits, then this operation has no affect.

If multiple sessions have made edits to the <candidate> configuration (because locking was not used), then all these edits will be applied at once, not just the edits from the current session.

It the <candidate> or <running> configurations are locked by another session, then this operation will fail with an 'in-use' error.

Normally, if there have been no changes made to the <candidate> configuration, then this operation has no effect. An <ok/> response will be returned without altering the <running> configuration.

However, if the <running> configuration encountered any errors during the initial load from NV-storage (such as startup-cfg.xml), then the current contents of the <running> configuration will be written to NV-storage, even if there are no changes to the <candidate> configuration.

The :confirmed-commit capability is fully supported:

  • confirmed-commit:1.0
  • confirmed-commit:1.1
<commit> operation


Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 4
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: :candidate:confirmed-commit

Mandatory Parameters:

  • none

Optional Parameters:

  • confirmed:
    • type: empty
    • default: none
    • capabilities needed: confirmed-commit
    • This parameter indicates that a confirmed commit operation should be started or extended.
  • confirm-timeout:
    • type: number
    • default: 600
    • capabilities needed: confirmed-commit
    • This parameter indicates the number of seconds to wait before canceling the confirmed commit automatically.
  • persist:
    • type: string
    • default: none
    • capabilities needed: confirmed-commit and base:1.1
    • This parameter sets the string that all sessions can use to access this confirmed commit procedure.
  • persist-id:
    • type: string
    • default: none
    • capabilities needed: confirmed-commit and base:1.1
    • This parameter changes the 'persist' string that all sessions can use to access this confirmed commit procedure. It is used to allow access to the confirmed commit operation, if the 'persist' parameter is not present.

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied: access control configured to deny access to this operation
  • in-use: the <candidate> or <running> configuration is locked by another session.
  • operation-failed
    • must-violation: must statement is false
    • too-few-elements: min-elements expression is false
    • too-many-elements: max-elements expression is false
    • data-not-unique: unique statement violation
  • data-missing: mandatory statement violation or missing leafref path object

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="5"> 
   <nc:commit/> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="5"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<copy-config>

The <copy-config> operation is used to transfer entire configuration databases in one operation.

This is a destructive 'stop-on-error' operation. It is not like <edit-config> or <commit>, which can be used in an 'all-or-nothing' manner.

A failed <copy-config> can leave the target of the operation in an unstable, invalid state. This operation should be used with caution.

The <source> and <target> parameters are simple to understand, but there are many interactions and some complexity, due to so many combinations of optional capabilities that are possible.

When in-line configuration data is used in the <source> parameter, it is applied to the <target> differently, depending on the database.

  • If the <target> is the <startup> configuration, then the new configuration simply overwrites the old one, and no validation is done at all.
  • If the <target> is the <candidate> or <running> configuration, then the new configuration is applied as if the operation was an <edit-config> operation with a <default-operation> parameter set to 'replace'. All validation and access control procedures are followed.

The <with-defaults> parameter is also available for filtering the output as it is copied to the target.

<copy-config> operation


Min parameters: 2
Max parameters: 3
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: none
Capabilities optional: :candidate:writable-running:startup

Mandatory Parameters:

  • source
    • type: container with 1 of N choice of leafs
    • usage: mandatory
    • default: none
    • This parameter specifies the name of the source database for the copy operation.
    • container contents: 1 of N:
      • candidate
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: :candidate
      • running
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: none
      • startup
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: startup
      • config:
        • type: container (in-line configuration data)
        • capabilities needed: none
          • The netconfd server will only the superuser account is allowed to copy in-line data into a database. All other users will get an 'access'-denied' error. Access to the entire database is required for this operational mode.
  • target
    • type: container with 1 of N choice of leafs
    • usage: mandatory
    • default: none
    • This parameter specifies the name of the target database for the copy operation.
    • container contents: 1 of N:
      • candidate
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: :candidate
      • startup
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: startup

Optional Parameters:

  • with-defaults
    • type: enumeration (none report-all report-all-tagged trim explicit)
    • default: none
    • capabilities needed: with-defaults
    • This parameter controls how nodes containing only default values are copied to the target database. If the <target> parameter is <candidate>, then this parameter will be ignored.

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied: access control configured to deny access to this operation
  • in-use: the configuration indicated by the <target> parameter is locked by another session.
  • <commit> errors, if the target parameter is the <running> configuration

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="7"> 
   <nc:copy-config> 
      <nc:source> 
         <nc:running/> 
      </nc:source> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:startup/> 
      </nc:target> 
   </nc:copy-config> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="7"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<create-subscription>

The <create-subscription> operation is used to start a NETCONF notifications subscription.

Only the 'NETCONF' stream is supported by netconfd.

A replay subscription is created by including the <startTime> parameter.

The subscription will continue until the session is closed, unless the <stopTime> parameter is present. In that case, the subscription will terminate at that tim (if in the future) or when all replay notifications with a lower <eventTime> value have been delivered.

The :notification and :interleave capabilities are always supported by netconfd.

The replay notification feature can be controlled with the --eventlog-size configuration parameter. If this is set to '0', then no stored notifications will be available for replay. The default is store the most recent 1000 system notification events.

An entry will be created in the 'subscriptions' data structure in the ietf-netconf-monitoring module, when the subscription is successfully started.


<create-subscription> operation


Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 4
Return type: status
YANG file: notifications.yang
Capabilities needed: :notification
Capabilities optional: :interleave

Mandatory Parameters:

  • none

Optional Parameters:

  • stream
    • type: string
    • default: 'NETCONF'
    • This parameter specifies the name of the notification stream for this subscription request. Only the 'NETCONF' stream is supported.
  • filter
    • type: anyxml (same as the <get> or <get-config> filter parameter)
    • default: none
    • This parameter specifies a boolean filter that should be applied to the stream. This is the same format as the standard <filter> element in RFC 4741, except that instead of creating a subset of the database for an <rpc-reply> PDU, the filter is used as a boolean test to send or drop each notification delivered from the server.
      • If any nodes are left in the 'test response', the server will send the entire notification.
      • If the result is empty after the filter is applied to the “test response”, then the server will not send the notification at all.
      • It is possible that access control will either cause the a notification to be dropped entirely, or may be pruned and still delivered. The standard is not clear on this topic. The netconfd server will prune any unauthorized payload from an eventType, but if the <eventType> itself is unauthorized, the entire notification will be dropped.
  • startTime
    • type: yang:date-and-time
    • This parameter causes any matching replay notifications to be delivered by the server, if notification replay is supported by the server. A notification will match if its <eventTime> value is greater or equal to the value of this parameter.
  • stopTime
    • type: yang:date-and-time
    • usage: not allowed unless startTime is also present
    • This parameter causes any matching replay notifications to be delivered by the server, if notification replay is supported by the server. A notification will match if its <eventTime> value is less than the value of this parameter.
      • This parameter must be greater than the startTime parameter, or an error will be returned by the server.

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied
  • subscription already active

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="2"> 
   <ncEvent:create-subscription
      xmlns:ncEvent="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:notification:1.0"> 
      <ncEvent:startTime>2009-01-01T00:00:00Z</ncEvent:startTime> 
   </ncEvent:create-subscription> 
</nc:rpc>

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="2"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<delete-config>

The <delete-config> operation is used to delete the entire contents of a NETCONF database.

By default, only the superuser account is allowed to invoke this operation.

If the :startup capability is supported, then the <startup> configuration can be cleared. This will affect the startup file that was actually loaded into the server, or the default file if the --no-startup configuration parameter was used.

The <running> and <candidate> configurations cannot be deleted.

The <startup> configuration can be repopulated with the <copy-config> or <commit> operations.


<delete-config> operation


Min parameters: 1
Max parameters: 1
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: :startup

Mandatory Parameters:

  • target
    • type: container with 1 of N choice of leafs
    • This parameter specifies the name of the target database for the <delete-config> operation.
    • container contents: 1 empty leaf value supported:
      • startup

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied
  • in-use: <startup> database is locked

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="2"> 
   <nc:delete-config> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:startup/> 
      </nc:target> 
   </nc:delete-config> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="2"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<discard-changes>

The <discard-changes> operation is used to remove any edits from the <candidate> configuration. This is done by deleting the contents of the <candidate> and re-filling it with the contents of the <running> configuration.

If the <candidate> configuration is locked by another session, this operation will fail.


<discard-changes> operation


Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 0
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: :candidate

Mandatory Parameters:

  • none

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="3"> 
   <nc:discard-changes/> 
</nc:rpc>

Example Reply:


<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="3"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<edit-config>

The <edit-config> operation is used to alter the target database.

The target database is the <candidate> configuration if the --target configuration parameter is set to 'candidate', and the <running> configuration if it is set to 'running'.

The nc:operation attribute must appear within the inline <config> parameter contents if the <default-operation> parameter is set to 'none', or the <edit-config> operation will have no affect. This is not an error condition.

If the nc:operation attribute is used, then it may appear any number of times, and be arbitrarily nested within the <config> parameter contents. Certain combinations will cause errors, however, so this must be done carefully. For example, a 'delete' operation nested within a 'create' operation is an error, because the conditions for both operations cannot possibly be satisfied at once. Other combinations, such as 'merge' within 'create' are not an error because there are no conflicting conditions present for either operation.


<edit-config> operation


Min parameters: 2
Max parameters: 5
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: :candidate or :writable-running
Capabilities optional: :rollback-on-error:validate

Mandatory Parameters:

  • config
    • type: anyxml
    • This parameter specifies the subset of the database that should be changed.
  • target
    • type: container with 1 of N choice of leafs
    • This parameter specifies the name of the target database for the edit operation.
    • container contents: choice: 1 of N:
      • candidate
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: :candidate
      • running
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: :writable-running

Optional Parameters:

  • default-operation
    • type: enumeration (merge replace none)
    • default: merge
    • This parameter specifies which edit operation will be in effect at the start of the operation, before any nc:operation attribute is found.
  • error-option
    • type: enumeration (stop-on-error continue-on-error rollback-on-error
    • default: stop-on-error
    • This parameter specifies what the server should do when an error is encountered.
  • test-option
    • type: enumeration (test-then-set set test-only)
    • default: 'test-then-set' if :validate capability is supported and 'set' otherwise

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied
  • in-use (target database is locked by another session)
  • <commit> validation errors: if test-then-set is used or the target is the <running> configuration.

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="12"> 
   <nc:edit-config> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:target> 
      <nc:default-operation>merge</nc:default-operation> 
      <nc:test-option>set</nc:test-option> 
      <nc:error-option>rollback-on-error</nc:error-option> 
      <nc:config> 
         <t:musttest xmlns:t="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/test"> 
            <t:A  nc:operation="create">'testing one two'</t:A> 
         </t:musttest> 
      </nc:config> 
   </nc:edit-config> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="12"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<get>

The <get> operation is used to retrieve data from the <running> configuration, or non-configuration data available on the server.

The simple command (<get/>) will cause all available data to be retrieved from the server. This may be generate a large response and waste resources.

To select only specific subsets of all available data, use subtree or XPath filtering by providing a <filter> parameter. Namespace prefixes are optional to use in XPath expressions. The netconfd will figure out the proper namespace, if possible. If prefixes are used, then they must be valid XML prefixes with a namespace properly declared in the PDU.

The retrieval of leaf or leaf-list nodes with default values is controlled with the <with-defaults> parameter.

If a portion of the requested data is not available due to access control restrictions, then that data is silently dropped from the <rpc-reply> message. It is implicitly understood that the client is only requesting data for which it is authorized to receive, in the event such data is selected in the request.


<get> operation


Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 3
Return type: data
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: none
Capabilities optional: :candidate:startup
with-defaults

Mandatory Parameters:

  • none

Optional Parameters:

  • filter
    • type='subtree'
      • type: anyxml
      • This parameter specifies the subset of the database that should be retrieved.
    • type='xpath' select='expr'
      • type: empty
      • The unqualified select attribute is used to specify an XPath filter.
  • with-defaults
    • type: enumeration (none report-all report-all-tagged trim explicit)
    • usage: [#9.10. --default-style|outline --default-style] configuration parameter used as the default if no value is provided
    • This parameter controls how default leaf and leaf-list nodes are returned by the server.
  • if-modified-since
    • type: date-and-time
    • usage: optional
    • This parameter requests that configuration data only be returned if any of the running datastore contents have been modified since this value. Monitoring data (config = false) does not affect the datastore timestamp. If the running datastore has not been modified since this timestamp, then an empty <data> element will be returned, and the request will not be processed.

Returns:

  • <data> element

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied
  • invalid-value

Example subtree Filter Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="4"> 
   <nc:get> 
      <nc:filter type="subtree"> 
         <proc:proc xmlns:proc="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/proc"> 
            <proc:cpuinfo> 
               <proc:cpu> 
                  <proc:cpu_MHz/> 
               </proc:cpu> 
            </proc:cpuinfo> 
         </proc:proc> 
      </nc:filter> 
   </nc:get> 
</nc:rpc> 

Equivalent XPath Filter Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="4"> 
   <nc:get> 
      <nc:filter type="xpath" select="/proc/cpuinfo/cpu/cpu_MHz"/> 
   </nc:get> 
</nc:rpc>]

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   last-modified="2011-08-21T17:51:46Z"
   message-id="4"> 
   <nc:data> 
      <proc:proc xmlns:proc="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/proc"> 
         <proc:cpuinfo> 
            <proc:cpu> 
               <proc:cpu_MHz>1600.000</proc:cpu_MHz> 
               <proc:processor>0</proc:processor> 
            </proc:cpu> 
            <proc:cpu> 
               <proc:cpu_MHz>2667.000</proc:cpu_MHz> 
               <proc:processor>1</proc:processor> 
            </proc:cpu> 
         </proc:cpuinfo> 
      </proc:proc> 
   </nc:data> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<get-config>

The <get-config> operation is used to retrieve data from a NETCONF configuration database.

To select only specific subsets of all available data, use subtree or XPath filtering by providing a <filter> parameter. Namespace prefixes are optional to use in XPath expressions. The netconfd will figure out the proper namespace, if possible. If prefixes are used, then they must be valid XML prefixes with a namespace properly declared in the PDU.

The retrieval of leaf or leaf-list nodes with default values is controlled with the <with-defaults> parameter.

If a portion of the requested data is not available due to access control restrictions, then that data is silently dropped from the <rpc-reply> message. It is implicitly understood that the client is only requesting data for which it is authorized to receive, in the event such data is selected in the request.

<get-config> operation


Min parameters: 1
Max parameters: 4
Return type: data
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: none
Capabilities optional: :candidate:startup
with-defaults

Mandatory Parameters:

  • source
    • type: container with 1 of N choice of leafs
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter specifies the name of the source database for the retrieval operation.
    • container contents: 1 of N:
      • candidate
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: :candidate
      • running
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: none
      • startup
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: startup

Optional Parameters:

  • filter
    • type='subtree'
      • type: anyxml
      • This parameter specifies the subset of the database that should be retrieved.
    • type='xpath' select='expr'
      • type: empty
      • The unqualified select attribute is used to specify an XPath filter.
  • with-defaults
    • type: enumeration (none report-all report-all-tagged trim explicit)
    • usage: --default-style configuration parameter used as the default if no value is provided
    • This parameter controls how default leaf and leaf-list nodes are returned by the server.
  • if-modified-since
    • type: date-and-time
    • usage: optional
    • This parameter requests that configuration data only be returned if any of the specified datastore contents have been modified since this value. If the specified datastore has not been modified since this timestamp, then an empty <data> element will be returned, and the request will not be processed.

Returns:

  • <data> element

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied
  • invalid-value

Example subtree Filter Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="3"> 
   <nc:get-config> 
      <nc:source> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:source> 
      <nc:filter type="subtree"> 
         <nacm:nacm xmlns:nacm="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/nacm"> 
            <nacm:rules> 
               <nacm:moduleRule/> 
            </nacm:rules> 
         </nacm:nacm> 
      </nc:filter> 
   </nc:get-config> 
</nc:rpc> 

Equivalent XPath Filter Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="3"> 
   <nc:get-config> 
      <nc:source> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:source> 
      <nc:filter type="xpath" select="/nacm/rules/moduleRule"/> 
   </nc:get-config> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   last-modified="2011-08-21T17:51:46Z"
   message-id="3"> 
   <nc:data> 
      <nacm:nacm xmlns:nacm="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/nacm"> 
         <nacm:rules> 
            <nacm:moduleRule> 
               <nacm:moduleName>netconf</nacm:moduleName> 
               <nacm:allowed-rights>read exec</nacm:allowed-rights> 
               <nacm:allowed-group>nacm:guest</nacm:allowed-group> 
            </nacm:moduleRule> 
            <nacm:moduleRule> 
               <nacm:moduleName>netconfd</nacm:moduleName> 
               <nacm:allowed-rights>read write exec</nacm:allowed-rights> 
               <nacm:allowed-group>nacm:admin</nacm:allowed-group> 
               <nacm:comment>access to shutdown and restart rpcs</nacm:comment> 
            </nacm:moduleRule> 
            <nacm:moduleRule> 
               <nacm:moduleName>netconf</nacm:moduleName> 
               <nacm:allowed-rights>read write exec</nacm:allowed-rights> 
               <nacm:allowed-group>nacm:admin</nacm:allowed-group> 
               <nacm:allowed-group>nacm:monitor</nacm:allowed-group> 
            </nacm:moduleRule> 
         </nacm:rules> 
      </nacm:nacm> 
   </nc:data> 
</nc:rpc-reply>


<get-my-session>

The <get-my-session> operation is used to retrieve session customization data for the current session.

The session indent amount, line size, and default behavior for the with-defaults parameter can be controlled at this time.

<get-my-session> operation


Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 0
Return type: data
YANG file: yuma-mysession.yang
Capabilities needed: none

Mandatory Parameters:

  • none

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • <indent>
    • type: uint32 (range 0 .. 9)
    • This parameter specifies the desired indent amount for the session.
  • <linesize>
    • type: uint32 (range 40 .. 1024)
    • This parameter specifies the desired line length for the session.
  • <with-defaults>
    • type: enumeration (report-all report-all-tagged trim explicit)
    • This parameter specifies the desired default with-defaults behavior for the session. The server-wide default value is set with the --default-style configuration parameter.
  • <cache-timeout>
    • type: uint32
    • units: seconds
    • The time it takes for cached virtual data to expire and be updated. When 0 caching is disabled.

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied

Example Request:

<get-my-session xmlns="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-mysession"/>

Example Reply:

<rpc-reply xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0">
  <indent xmlns="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-mysession">2</indent>
  <linesize xmlns="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-mysession">72</linesize>
  <with-defaults xmlns="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-mysession">explicit</with-defaults>
  <cache-timeout xmlns="http://yuma123.org/ns/yuma123-mysession-cache">0</cache-timeout>
</rpc-reply>

<get-schema>

The <get-schema> operation is used to retrieve YANG modules and submodules from the server.

The 'YANG' and 'YIN' formats are supported for all YANG files loaded into the server.

If the <version> parameter is set to the empty string, then the server will return whichever version it supports. If multiple versions are supported, then the server will pick a canonical version, which may not be the most recent version.

The <identifier> parameter must contain the name of the YANG file without any path or file extension specification.

<get-schema> operation


Min parameters: 3
Max parameters: 3
Return type: data
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: :schema-retrieval

Mandatory Parameters:

  • identifier
    • type: string
    • This parameter specifies the name of the module to retrieve.
      • Do not use any path specification of file extension; just the module name is entered.
      • The name is case-sensitive, and must be specified exactly as defined.
  • version
    • type: string
    • This parameter specifies the version of the module to retrieve.
      • This will be the most recent YANG revision date string defined in a module revision statement.
      • If any version is acceptable, or if the specific version is not known, then use the empty string.
  • format
    • type: enumeration (XSD YANG YIN RNG)
    • This parameter specifies the format of the module to be retrieved. Only the YANG format is supported.
      • YANG: RFC 6020
      • YIN: RFC 6020

Returns:

  • <data> element (contents of the YANG file)

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="55"> 
   <ns:get-schema xmlns:ns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:state"> 
      <ns:identifier>ietf-with-defaults</ns:identifier> 
      <ns:format>YANG</ns:format> 
      <ns:version/> 
   </ns:get-schema> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="55"> 
   <ns:data xmlns:ns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:state"> 
*** entire contents of YANG module would be here, no extra indenting ***
   </ns:data> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<kill-session>

The <kill-session> operation is used to force the termination of another NETCONF session. This is sometimes needed if an idle session which is holding one or more locks was abandoned. It may also be needed for security reasons. In any case, this operation should be used with extreme caution.


<kill-session> operation


Min parameters: 1
Max parameters: 1
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: none

Mandatory Parameters:

  • session-id
    • type: uint32 (range: 1.. max)
    • default: none
    • This parameter specifies the session number of the currently active NETCONF session that should be terminated.

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="42"> 
   <nc:kill-session> 
      <nc:session-id>1</nc:session-id> 
   </nc:kill-session> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="42"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<load>

The <load> operation is used to load new YANG modules at run-time.

The module file must already be present in the module search path of the server.

There must not be any version of the module already loaded.

This operation is tagged as nacm:secure, so by default, only the super user account is allowed to use it.


<load> operation


Min parameters: 1
Max parameters: 3
Return type: data
YANG file: yuma-system.yang
Capabilities needed: none

Mandatory Parameters:

  • module
    • The name of the YANG module to load

Optional Parameters:

  • revision
    • The revision date of the module to load. If missing, then server can select the version to use.
  • deviation
    • The name of a deviation module to load before loading this module. Zero or more instances of this parameter can be entered. Duplicates will be ignored.

Returns:

  • <mod-revision>
    • The revision date of the module that was already loaded, or was just loaded.

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied
  • module not found
  • version not found
  • different version already loaded
  • module parsing errors
  • resource errors

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="52"> 
   <nd:load xmlns:nd="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/netconfd"> 
      <nd:module>test2</nd:module> 
   </nd:load> 
</nc:rpc>

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="52"> 
   <nd:mod-revision xmlns:nd="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/netconfd">
       2008-10-15
   </nd:mod-revision> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<lock>

The <lock> operation is used to insure exclusive write access to an entire configuration database.

The <running> configuration can be locked at any time, if it is currently unlocked.

If the :startup capability is supported, the <startup> configuration can be locked at any time, if it is currently unlocked.

If the :candidate capability is supported, and it is not already locked, then it may usually be locked. However, the <candidate> configuration can only be locked if there are no edits already contained within it. A <discard-changes> operation may be needed to clear any leftover edits, if this operation fails with a 'resource-denied' error instead of a 'lock-denied' error.

If the session holding the lock is terminated for any reason, the lock will be released, as if the <unlock> operation was invoked.


<lock> operation


Min parameters: 1
Max parameters: 1
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: none
Capabilities optional: :candidate:startup

Mandatory Parameters:

  • target
    • type: container with 1 of N choice of leafs
    • This parameter specifies the name of the target database to be locked.
    • container contents: 1 of N:
      • candidate
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: :candidate
      • running
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: none
      • startup
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: startup

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied
  • lock-denied (lock already held by <session-id> in the <error-info>)
  • resource-denied (candidate is dirty; <discard-changes> needed)

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="62"> 
   <nc:lock> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:target> 
   </nc:lock> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="62"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<no-op>

The <no-op> operation is used for debugging and performance testing purposes.

This operation does not do anything. It simply returns <ok/>, unless any parameters are provided.


<no-op> operation


Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 0
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma-system.yang
Capabilities needed: none

Mandatory Parameters:

  • none

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="63"> 
   <nd:no-op xmlns:nd="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/netconfd"/> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="63"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<partial-lock>

The <partial-lock> operation is used to lock part of the <running> database.

Refer to RFC 5717 or the ietf-netconf-partial-lock.yang module for details on this operation.


<partial-lock> operation


Min parameters: 1
Max parameters: 1
Return type: data
YANG file: ietf-netconf-partial-lock.yang
Capabilities needed: :partial-lock

Mandatory Parameters:

  • <select>
    • type: XPath 1.0 string
    • This parameter contains an XPath expression for a node-set result, identifying the database nodes to lock.
    • One of more instances of this parameter is required.
    • The server allows relaxed XPath syntax. If prefixes are used, then a proper namespace declaration must be present in the request. If prefixes are not used, then any available namespace that matches the local name will be used.

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • <lock-id>
    • type: uint32 (range 1 .. MAX_UINT)
    • This data identifies the lock ID to use when releasing the lock with the <partial-unlock> operation.
    • There will be one of these elements in the reply.
  • <locked-node>
    • type: instance-identifier
    • This data identifies a locked node as a result of the request.
    • There will be one or more of these elements in the reply.

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access denied, in-use, resource-denied

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="260"> 
   <pl:partial-lock xmlns:pl="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:partial-lock:1.0"> 
      <pl:select>//interface</pl:select> 
   </pl:partial-lock> 
</nc:rpc>

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="260" xmlns:if="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-interfaces"> 
   <pl:lock-id xmlns:pl="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:partial-lock:1.0">1</pl:lock-id> 
   <pl:locked-node xmlns:pl="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:partial-lock:1.0">/if:interfaces/if:interface[if:name='virbr0']</pl:locked-node> 
   <pl:locked-node xmlns:pl="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:partial-lock:1.0">/if:interfaces/if:interface[if:name='eth0']</pl:locked-node> 
   <pl:locked-node xmlns:pl="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:partial-lock:1.0">/if:interfaces/if:interface[if:name='lo']</pl:locked-node> 
</nc:rpc-reply> 

<partial-unlock>

The <partial-unlock> operation is used to unlock part of the <running> database that was previously locked with the <partial-lock> operation. Only the session that called <partial-lock> can release the lock with this operation.

Refer to RFC 5717 or the ietf-netconf-partial-lock.yang module for details on this operation.


<partial-unlock> operation


Min parameters: 1
Max parameters: 1
Return type: status
YANG file: ietf-netconf-partial-lock.yang
Capabilities needed: :partial-lock

Mandatory Parameters:

  • <lock-id>
    • type: unit32 (1 .. MAX_UINT)
    • This parameter contains the lock ID of the partial lock to release.
    • One of more instances of this parameter is required.
    • The server allows relaxed XPath syntax. If prefixes are used, then a proper namespace declaration must be present in the request. If prefixes are not used, then any available namespace that matches the local name will be used.

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access denied, invalid-value

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="263"> 
   <pl:partial-unlock xmlns:pl="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:partial-lock:1.0"> 
      <pl:lock-id>1</pl:lock-id> 
   </pl:partial-unlock> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="263"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply> 

<restart>

The <restart> operation is used to restart the netconfd server.

By default, only the 'superuser' account is allowed to invoke this operation.

If permission is granted, then the current NETCONF session will dropped, during the server restart.


<restart> operation


Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 0
Return type: none
YANG file: yuma-system.yang
Capabilities needed: none

Mandatory Parameters:

  • none

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • none; session will be dropped upon success

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access denied

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="63"> 
   <nd:restart xmlns:nd="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/netconfd"/> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


[no reply will be sent; session will be dropped instead.]

<set-log-level>

The <set-log-level> operation is used to configure the server logging verbosity level.

Only the designated superuser user can invoke this operation by default.


<set-log-level> operation


Min parameters: 1
Max parameters: 1
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma123-system.yang
Capabilities needed: none

Mandatory Parameters:

  • <log-level>
    • type: enumeration (off, error, warn, info, debug, debug2, debug3, debug4)
    • default: none
    • This parameter specifies the server logging verbosity level.

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied

Example Request:

<set-log-level xmlns="http://yuma123.org/ns/yuma123-system">
  <log-level>debug4</log-level>
</set-log-level>

Example Reply:

<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0"
   message-id="3">
   <nc:ok/>
</nc:rpc-reply>

<set-my-session>

The <set-my-session> operation is used to configure the session customization data for the current session.

The session indent amount, line size, and default behavior for the with-defaults parameter can be controlled at this time.

<set-my-session> operation


Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 4
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma-mysession.yang
Capabilities needed: none

Mandatory Parameters:

  • none

Optional Parameters:

  • <indent>
    • type: uint32 (range 0 .. 9)
    • default: 3 (can be changed with the --indent configuration parameter)
    • This parameter specifies the desired indent amount for the session.
  • <linesize>
    • type: uint32 (range 40 .. 1024)
    • default: 72
    • This parameter specifies the desired line length for the session.
  • <with-defaults>
    • type: enumeration (report-all report-all-tagged trim explicit)
    • default: report-all (can be changed with the --default-style configuration parameter)
    • This parameter specifies the desired default with-defaults behavior for the session. The server-wide default value is set with the --default-style configuration parameter.
  • <cache-timeout>
    • type: uint32
    • units: seconds
    • The time it takes for cached virtual data to expire and be updated. When 0 caching is disabled.

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access-denied

Example Request:

 <nowiki><?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="3"> 
   <myses:set-my-session xmlns:myses="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/mysession"> 
      <myses:indent>4</myses:indent>
      <myses:linesize>64</myses:linesize>
      <myses:with-defaults>trim</myses:with-defaults> 
      <cache-timeout xmlns="http://yuma123.org/ns/yuma123-mysession-cache">0</cache-timeout>
   </myses:set-my-session> 
</nc:rpc>


Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="3"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<shutdown>

The <shutdown> operation is used to shut down the netconfd server.

By default, only the 'superuser' account is allowed to invoke this operation.

If permission is granted, then the current NETCONF session will dropped, during the server shutdown.


<shutdown> operation


Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 0
Return type: none
YANG file: yuma-system.yang
Capabilities needed: none

Mandatory Parameters:

  • none

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • none; session will be dropped upon success

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access denied

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="1"> 
   <nd:shutdown xmlns:nd="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/netconfd"/> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


[no reply will be sent; session will be dropped instead.]

<unlock>

The <unlock> operation is used to release a global lock held by the current session.

The specified configuration database must be locked, or a 'no-access' <error-app-tag> and an <error-message> of 'wrong-config-state' will be returned.

If the <candidate> configuration contains any edits that have not been committed, then these edits will all be lost if the <unlock> operation is invoked. A <discard-changes> operation is performed automatically by the server when the <candidate> database is unlocked.


<unlock> operation


Min parameters: 1
Max parameters: 1
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: none
Capabilities optional: :candidate:startup

Mandatory Parameters:

  • target
    • type: container with 1 of N choice of leafs
    • This parameter specifies the name of the target database to be unlocked.
    • container contents: 1 of N:
      • candidate
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: :candidate
      • running
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: none
      • startup
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: startup

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access denied
  • no-access (database not locked)
  • invalid-value (database not supported)

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="65"> 
   <nc:unlock> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:target> 
   </nc:unlock> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="65"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

<validate>

The <validate> operation is used to perform the <commit> validation tests against a database or some in-line configuration data.


<validate> operation


Min parameters: 1
Max parameters: 1
Return type: status
YANG file: yuma-netconf.yang
Capabilities needed: :validate
Capabilities optional: :candidate:startup

Mandatory Parameters:

  • target
    • type: container with 1 of N choice of leafs
    • This parameter specifies the name of the target database, or the in-line configuration data, that should be validated.
    • container contents: 1 of N:
      • candidate
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: :candidate
      • running
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: none
      • startup
        • type: empty
        • capabilities needed: startup
      • config
        • type anyxml
        • capabilities needed: none

Optional Parameters:

  • none

Returns:

  • <ok/>

Possible Operation Errors:

  • access denied
  • <commit> validation errors

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="76"> 
   <nc:validate> 
      <nc:source> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:source> 
   </nc:validate> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="76"> 
   <nc:ok/> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

Access Control

The netconfd access control data model is defined in yuma-nacm.yang.

The nacm:secure and nacm:very-secure extensions also affect access control. If present in the YANG definition, then the default behavior (when no rule is found) is not followed. Instead, the super user account must be used to allow default access.

There are 3 types of access control rules that can be defined:

  1. module rule
  2. RPC operation rule
  3. database rule

Rules apply to one or more groups.

Each group contains zero or more user names.

Database rules are applied top-down, at every level.

The user needs permission for the requested access (read or write) for all referenced nodes within the database. For example, if there was a leaf from module X that augments a container in module Y, the user would need permission to access the container from module Y, and then permission to access the leaf from module X.

The NACM data model can be used without any configuration at all. Refer to the section on access control modes for more details.

[[Image:]]

Normally, some configuration is required:

  • groups: configure one or more administrative groups
  • rules: configure one or more access control rules

The entire /nacm subtree is tagged as nacm:very-secure. By default, only the super-user account can read or write any of its contents. It is suggested that even read access to this data structure be controlled carefully at all times.

NACM Module Structure

The /nacm subtree consists of 3 read-only leafs and 2 containers:

  • leaf <enable-nacm>: enable or disable access control enforcement
  • leaf <read-default>: permit or deny read access when no rule found
  • leaf <write-default>: permit or deny write access when no rule found
  • leaf <exec-default>: permit or deny execute access when no rule found
  • leaf <denied-rpcs>: read-only counter of denied RPC operation requests
  • leaf <denied-data-writes>: read-only counter of denied database write requests
  • container <groups>: need 1 or more group list entries in order for rules to have any effect
    • list <group>: principle that is assigned access privileges
      • leaf <group-identity>: group identifier string
      • leaf-list <user-name>: leaf-list of users that belong to the group
  • container <rules>:
    • list <module-rule>: an access rule for an entire module namespace
      • leaf <module-name>: [key] name of the YANG module associated with the rule
      • leaf <allowed-rights>: [key] privileges granted to all groups associated with the rule
      • leaf-list <allowed-group>: leaf-list of one or more group identifiers that are associated with the rule
      • leaf <comment>: comment string for the rule (ignored by the server)
    • list <rpc-rule>: an access rule for one specific protocol operation, defined in a YANG rpc statement.
      • leaf <rpc-module-name>: [key] name of the YANG module associated with the rule
      • leaf <rpc-name>: [key] name of the RPC operation associated with the rule
      • leaf <allowed-rights>: [key] privileges granted to all groups associated with the rule
      • leaf-list <allowed-group>: leaf-list of one or more group identifiers that are associated with the rule
      • leaf <comment>: comment string for the rule (ignored by the server)
    • list <data-rule>: an user-ordered access rule for one or more database subtrees.
      • leaf <name>: [key] arbitrary name string for the rule
      • leaf <path>: XPath expression for the database instances which are associated with the rule
      • leaf <allowed-rights>: privileges granted to all groups associated with the rule
      • leaf-list <allowed-group>: leaf-list of one or more group identifiers that are associated with the rule
      • leaf <comment:> comment string for the rule (ignored by the server)
    • list <notification-rule>: an user-ordered access rule for one notification events.
      • leaf <notification-module-name>: [key] name of the YANG module associated with the rule
      • leaf <notification-name>: [key] name of the notification event type associated with the rule
      • leaf <allowed-rights>: [key] privileges granted to all groups associated with the rule
      • leaf <allowed-rights>: privileges granted to all groups associated with the rule
      • leaf-list <allowed-group>: leaf-list of one or more group identifiers that are associated with the rule
      • leaf <comment:> comment string for the rule (ignored by the server)

Users and Groups

Access rights in NACM are given to groups.

A group entry consists of a group identifier and a list of user names that are members of the group.

A group is named with is a YANG identity, which has a base of 'nacmRoot':


    identity nacmGroups {
        description 
        "Root of all NETCONF Administrative Groups";
    }


There are 3 hard-wired group names that can be used:

  • nacm:admin
  • nacm:monitor
  • nacm:guest

Any module can define an extension identity for the 'nacmGroups' base type, and use it as a group name. There are no special semantics associated with any particular group name.


    import nacm { prefix nacm; }

    identity mygroup {
        description 
        "My special administrator's group.";
        base nacm:nacmGroups;
    }

By default, there are no groups created. Each /nacm/groups/group entry must be created by the client. There is no user name table either. It is assumed that the operator will know which user names are valid within each managed device.

Creating New Groups

The <edit-config> operation can be used to create new group entries.

Each group is identified only by its <groupIdentity> leaf.

A user name can appear within the same group zero or one times.

A user name can appear in zero or more groups.

When a user is a member of multiple groups, all these groups will be used to match against rules, in a conceptual 'OR' expression. If any of these groups matches one of the <allowed-group> leaf-list nodes within one of the 3 rule types, then that rule will be the one that is used. Rules are always searched in the order they are entered, even the system-ordered lists.

The path to the group element is /nacm:nacm/nacm:groups/nacm:group.

The following <edit-config> example shows how a group can be defined. The group name is 'nacm:guest',and the users 'fred' and 'barney' are the initial members of this group.


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="3"> 
   <nc:edit-config> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:target> 
      <nc:config> 
         <nacm:nacm xmlns:nacm="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-nacm"> 
            <nacm:groups> 
               <nacm:group  nc:operation="create"> 
                  <nacm:group-identity>nacm:guest</nacm:group-identity> 
                  <nacm:user-name>fred</nacm:user-name>
                  <nacm:user-name>barney</nacm:user-name>
               </nacm:group> 
            </nacm:groups> 
         </nacm:nacm> 
      </nc:config> 
   </nc:edit-config> 
</nc:rpc> 


Access Control Modes

The --access-control configuration parameter is used to globally enable or disable the access control system. It cannot be changed at run-time, or through a NETCONF session.

  • off: no access control enforcement is done at all.
  • disabled: all nacm:secure and nacm:very-secure tagged objects will require the super user account to access, but no other access control enforcement will be done.
  • permissive: all nacm:very-secure objects will require super user account to read. No other read access enforcement will be done. Write and exec access will be checked.
  • enforcing: all access control enforcement will be checked. This is the default behavior.

Permissions

There are 3 types of access permissions defined:

  1. read: retrieval of any kind
  2. write: modification of any kind
  3. exec: right to invoke an RPC operation

The <allowed-rights> object in each of the 3 access control rule entries is a 'bits' leaf, which is allowed to contain any of these string tokens, or none of them to deny all access to a set of groups.

When a rule is found which matches the current request, the <allowed-rights> leaf will be used to grant permission or not. If the bit for the requested operation is present, then the request is permitted. If the bit is not present, then the request is denied.

Special YANG Extensions For Access Control

There are 3 YANG language extensions defined that can be used to force access control behavior for specific data nodes in the configuration database.

  1. nacm:secure (no parameter)If present in a data node statement, this extension will cause the write default to be ignored, and any write access to instances of this object will be rejected with an 'access-denied' error unless there is an explicit NACM rule allowing write access to the user session. If present in an 'rpc' statement, then exec access will be denied unless there is an explicit NACM rule granting exec access.
  2. nacm:very-secure (no parameter)If present in a data node statement, this extension will cause the read and write defaults to be ignored, and any write access to instances of this object will be rejected with an 'access-denied' error unless there is an explicit NACM rule allowing write access to the user session. Read access will be denied, which causes that data to be removed from the <rpc-reply>. If present in an 'rpc' statement, then exec access will be denied unless there is an explicit NACM rule granting exec access.
  3. ncx:user-write (parameter: permitted, type: bits: create, update, delete)
  4. Used within database configuration data definition statements to control user write access to the database object containing this statement. The 'permitted' argument is a list of operations that users are permitted to invoke for the specified node. These permissions will over-ride all NACM access control rules, even if NACM is disabled.To dis-allow all user access, provide an empty string for the 'permitted' parameter.
    To allow only create and delete user access, provide the string 'create delete' for the parameter. Use this for YANG database objects that cannot be changed once they are set.

Default Enforcement Behavior

Each access type has a default behavior if no rule is found and no special YANG extensions apply:

  • read default: permit
  • write default: deny
  • exec default: permit

These defaults can be changed by the server developer, by modifying the YANG definitions in yuma-nacm.yang. If the data node object definition contains the special YANG extensions described in the previous section, then the extension will define default access and the NACM default access rule will not be used.

Access Control Algorithm

The following logic represents the steps taken during access control enforcement.


Phase 1: RPC Operation Access

  • Step 1) If the --access-control configuration parameter is set to 'off' then grant access and exit.
  • Step 2) If the user name matches the --superuser configuration variable (or the default 'superuser' if not set), then grant access and exit.
  • Step 3) If the RPC operation requested is the NETCONF <close-session> operation, then grant access and exit.
  • Step 4) If the --access-control configuration parameter is set to 'disabled':
    • a) If the requested RPC operation is tagged as nacm:secure or nacm:very-secure, then deny access, otherwise grant access, and exit.
  • Step 5) Retrieve all the NACM groups that this user is found within.
    • If there are no groups found:
      • a) If the requested RPC operation is tagged as nacm:secure or nacm:very-secure, then deny access and exit.
      • b) If the <exec-default> leaf is set to 'permit' then grant access, otherwise deny access, and exit.
    • If there are any groups found, then proceed to step 6.
  • Step 6) Check if there are any /nacm/rules nodes configured.
    • If there are no rules configured, then if the <exec-default> leaf is set to 'permit' then grant access, otherwise deny access, and exit.
    • If there are some entries within the <rules> container, then proceed to step 7.
  • Step 7) Check for any /nacm/rules/rpc-rule entries that contain an <allowed-group> with the same value as one of the groups found in step 5, and is also for the requested RPC operation. The first entry found will be used.
      • If an entry is found, then check its <allowed-rights> leaf for the 'exec' bit.
        • If the 'exec' bit is found, then grant access, otherwise deny access, and exit.
      • If a matching <rpc-rule> entry is not found, then proceed to step 8.
  • Step 8) Check for any /nacm/rules/module-rule entries that contain an <allowed-group> with the same value as one of the groups found in step 5, and is also for same module as the requested RPC operation. The first entry found will be used.
      • If an entry is found, then check its <allowed-rights> leaf for the 'exec' bit.
        • If 'exec' bit is found, then grant access, otherwise deny access, and exit.
      • If a matching <module-rule> entry is not found, then proceed to step 9.
  • Step 9) If the <exec-default> leaf is set to 'permit' then grant access, otherwise deny access.
    • Continue to phase 2a if any read access, or phase 2b if any write access to the NETCONF database contents is requested on behalf of the specific RPC operation.

Phase 2a: Database Read and Notification Access

  • Step 10) If the user name matches the --superuser configuration variable (or the default 'superuser' if not set), then grant access and exit.
  • Step 11) Check the access control mode:
    • a) If the --access-control configuration parameter is set to 'permissive'
      • If the requested object is tagged as nacm:very-secure, then deny access, otherwise grant access, and exit
    • b) Otherwise, this must be normal 'enforcing' mode, so proceed to step 12.
  • Step 12) Make sure there are some groups and rules
    • a) If there were no groups found in step 5, or no rules found in step 6, then:
      • If the requested object is tagged as nacm:very-secure, then deny access, otherwise:
        • If the <read-default> is set to 'permit', then grant access, otherwise deny access, and exit.
    • b) If there are some groups and rules, then proceed to step 13 to start checking access control rules.
  • Step 13) Check for any /nacm/rules/data-rule entries that contain a <path> expression that evaluates to an XPath node-set that contains the requested database node, and the <allowed-group> leaf-list contains an entry with the same value as one of the groups found in step 5. The first such entry found will be used.
      • If an entry is found, then check its <allowed-rights> leaf for the 'read' bit.
        • If the 'read' bit is found, then grant access, otherwise deny access, and exit.
      • If an entry is not found, then proceed to step 14.
  • Step 14) Check for any /nacm/rules/module-rule entries that contain an <allowed-group> with the same value as one of the groups found in step 5, and is also for the same module as the requested database node. The first entry found will be used.
      • If an entry is found, then check its <allowed-rights> leaf for the 'read' bit.
        • If the 'read' bit is found, then grant access, otherwise deny access, and exit.
      • If an entry is not found, then proceed to step 15.
  • Step 15) If the <read-default> leaf is set to 'permit' then grant access, otherwise deny access, and exit.

Phase 2b) Database Write Access

  • Step 16) If the user name matches the --superuser configuration variable (or the default 'superuser' if not set), then grant access and exit.
  • Step 17) Make sure there are some groups and rules
    • a) If there were no groups found in step 5, or no rules found in step 6, then:
      • If the requested object is tagged as nacm:secure or nacm:very-secure, then deny access, otherwise:
        • If the <write-default> is set to 'permit', then grant access, otherwise deny access, and exit.
    • b) If there are some groups and rules, then proceed to step 18 to start checking access control rules.
  • Step 18) Check for any /nacm/rules/data-rule entries that contain a <path> expression that evaluates to an XPath node-set that contains the requested database node, and the <allowed-groups> leaf-list contains an entry with the same value as one of the groups found in step 5. The first such entry found will be used.
      • If an entry is found, then check its <allowed-rights> leaf for the 'write' bit.
        • If the 'write' bit is found, then grant access, otherwise deny access, and exit.
      • If an entry is not found, then proceed to step 19.
  • Step 19) Check for any /nacm/rules/module-mule entries that contain an <allowed-group> with the same value as one of the groups found in step 5, and is also for the same module as the requested database node. The first entry found will be used.
      • If an entry is found, then check its <allowed-rights> leaf for the 'write' bit.
        • If the 'write' bit is found, then grant access, otherwise deny access, and exit.
      • If an entry is not found, then proceed to step 20.
  • Step 20) If the <write-default> leaf is set to 'permit' then grant access, otherwise deny access, and exit.

Module Access Control Rules

The /nacm/rules/module-rule data structure is used to configure access for any object or RPC operation from a specific YANG module. If the module namespace URI is the same as the XML namespace used in the NETCONF PDU, then the module rule is considered a match.

Multiple instances can appear for a single module, as long as the <allowed-access> key leaf value is different in each entry. This allows different groups to get different access to the same module (e.g., read vs. read and write).

There is no way to move <module-rule> entries around, once they are created.

If a group appears in multiple entries for the same module name, then the first one encountered will be used. Entries are checked in the same order they are returned in a <get-config> reply message.


The following example shows an <edit-config> operation which creates 2 <moduleRule> entries, for the following configuration:

  • the 'admin' group is allowed to read and write the NACM module.
  • the 'monitor' group is allowed to read the NACM module.


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="4"> 
   <nc:edit-config> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:target> 
      <nc:config> 
         <nacm:nacm xmlns:nacm="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-nacm"> 
            <nacm:rules> 
               <nacm:module-rule  nc:operation="create"> 
                  <nacm:module-name>nacm</nacm:module-name> 
                  <nacm:allowed-rights>read write</nacm:allowed-rights> 
                  <nacm:allowed-group>nacm:admin</nacm:allowed-group> 
               </nacm:module-rule> 
               <nacm:module-rule  nc:operation="create"> 
                  <nacm:module-name>nacm</nacm:module-name> 
                  <nacm:allowed-rights>read</nacm:allowed-rights> 
                  <nacm:allowed-group>nacm:monitor</nacm:allowed-group> 
               </nacm:module-rule> 
            </nacm:rules> 
         </nacm:nacm> 
      </nc:config> 
   </nc:edit-config> 
</nc:rpc> 

RPC Access Control Rules

The /nacm/rules/rpc-rule data structure is used to configure access for a specific RPC operation from a specific YANG module. If the module namespace URI for the <rpc-module-name> value is the same as the XML namespace used in the NETCONF PDU,and the <rpc--name> value is the same as the RPC method name, then the RPC rule is considered a match.

Multiple instances can appear for a single RPC operation, as long as the <allowed-access> key leaf value is different in each entry. This allows different groups to get different access to the same operation (e.g., exec vs. no access).

There is no way to move <rpc-rule> entries around, once they are created.

If a group appears in multiple entries for the same RPC operation, then the first one encountered will be used. Entries are checked in the same order they are returned in a <get-config> reply message.

If the 'read' or 'write' access bits are set in the <allowed-rights> key leaf, then they will be ignored. This will not cause an error, but it these bits have no effect within an RPC rule.


The following example shows an <edit-config> operation which creates 2 <module-rule> entries, for the following configuration:

  • the 'admin' and 'monitor' groups are allowed to execute the <get-config> operation.
  • the 'guest' group is not allowed to execute the <get-config> operation


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="5"> 
   <nc:edit-config> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:target> 
      <nc:config> 
         <nacm:nacm xmlns:nacm="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-nacm"> 
            <nacm:rules> 
               <nacm:rpc-rule  nc:operation="create"> 
                  <nacm:rpc-module-name>netconf</nacm:rpc-module-name> 
                  <nacm:rpc--name>get-config</nacm:rpc--name> 
                  <nacm:allowed-rights>exec</nacm:allowed-rights> 
                  <nacm:allowed-group>nacm:admin</nacm:allowed-group> 
                  <nacm:allowed-group>nacm:monitor</nacm:allowed-group> 
               </nacm:rpc-rule> 
               <nacm:rpc-rule  nc:operation="create"> 
                  <nacm:rpc-module-name>netconf</nacm:rpc-module-name> 
                  <nacm:rpc--name>get-config</nacm:rpc--name> 
                  <nacm:allowed-rights/>
                  <nacm:allowed-group>nacm:guest</nacm:allowed-group> 
               </nacm:rpc-rule> 
            </nacm:rules> 
         </nacm:nacm> 
      </nc:config> 
   </nc:edit-config> 
</nc:rpc> 

Data Access Control Rules

The /nacm/rules/data-rule data structure is used to configure access for a specific set of database nodes (or notification payload nodes). If the requested node in contained within the node-set result of the <path> XPath path expression, then the data rule is considered a match.

Multiple instances of the same <path> expression (or equivalent expressions), can appear at any time, and in any order.

The <path> leaf is not allowed to contain an arbitrary XPath expression (at this time). Instead, an ncx:schema-instance string is allowed. This has the same syntax as a YANG instance-identifier built-in type, except that the key leaf predicates (e.g., [name='eth0']) are optional instead of mandatory. A missing key leaf predicate indicates that all instances of that key leaf are going to match the data rule.

This is a user-created list, and the key leaf is the arbitrary <name> field. Use the YANG 'insert' operation to add data rules in some order other than 'last'. Entries are checked in the same order they are returned in a <get-config> reply message.

If a group appears in multiple entries, then the first one that produces a result node-set with a matching node wiill be used.

If the 'exec' access bit is set in the <allowed-rights> key leaf, then it will be ignored. This will not cause an error, but it this bit has no effect within a data rule.

The following example shows an <edit-config> operation which creates 3 <data-rule> entries, for the following configuration:

  • the 'admin' group is allowed to read or write all interfaces.
  • the 'monitor' group is allowed to read the 'eth0' interface
  • the 'guest' group is not allowed to read any interfaces information


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="3"> 
   <nc:edit-config> 
      <nc:target> 
         <nc:candidate/> 
      </nc:target> 
      <nc:default-operation>none</nc:default-operation> 
      <nc:config> 
         <nacm:nacm xmlns:nacm="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-nacm"> 
            <nacm:rules> 
               <nacm:data-rule  nc:operation="create"> 
                  <nacm:name>itf-1</nacm:name> 
                  <nacm:path 
                     xmlns:if="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-interfaces">
                       /if:interfaces/if:interface
                  </nacm:path> 
                  <nacm:allowed-rights>read write</nacm:allowed-rights> 
                  <nacm:allowed-group>nacm:admin</nacm:allowed-group> 
                  <nacm:comment>
                     let admin group read and write all interfaces
                  </nacm:comment> 
               </nacm:data-rule> 
               <nacm:data-rule  nc:operation="create"> 
                  <nacm:name>itf-2</nacm:name> 
                  <nacm:path 
                     xmlns:if="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/interfaces">
                       /if:interfaces/if:interface[if:name='eth0']
                  </nacm:path> 
                  <nacm:allowed-rights>read</nacm:allowed-rights> 
                  <nacm:allowed-group>nacm:monitor</nacm:allowed-group> 
                  <nacm:comment>
                     let monitor group read interface 'eth0'
                  </nacm:comment> 
               </nacm:data-rule> 
               <nacm:data-rule  nc:operation="create"> 
                  <nacm:name>itf-3</nacm:name> 
                  <nacm:path 
                     xmlns:if="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/interfaces">
                       /if:interfaces
                  </nacm:path> 
                  <nacm:allowed-rights/> 
                  <nacm:allowed-group>nacm:guest</nacm:allowed-group> 
                  <nacm:comment>
                     do not let guest group read any interfaces info
                  </nacm:comment> 
               </nacm:data-rule> 
            </nacm:rules> 
         </nacm:nacm> 
      </nc:config> 
   </nc:edit-config> 
</nc:rpc> 

Monitoring

The <get> and <get-config> operations are fully supported for retrieving data from the <candidate> and <running> configuration databases.

The <get-config> operation is not supported for the <startup> configuration.

The <copy-config> operation is only supported copying the <running> configuration to the <startup> configuration.

If the NACM access control policy denies permission to read a particular node, then that node is silently skipped in the output. No error or warning messages will be generated.

client applications should be prepared to receive XML subtrees that have been pruned by access control. The <data> element will always be present, so an empty <data/> element indicates that no data was returned, either because the <filter> did not match, or because access control pruned the requested nodes.


There are really five types of filters available for retrieval operations:


Filter Types


type
description
is_config() Choose the <get>operation for all objects, or <get-config> for just config=true objects
is_default() Set the <with-defaults> parameter to 'trim'
is_client_set() Set the <with-defaults> parameter to 'explicit'
subtree filtering Use

<filter type="subtree">

// some-xml-subtree

</filter>

to retrieve portions of the <candidate> or <running> configurations.

XPath filtering Use

<filter type="xpath"

select="expr"/>

to retrieve portions of the <candidate> or <running> configurations.

Using Subtree Filters

The subtree filtering feature is fully supported.

The order of nodes within the <filter> element is not relevant. Data returned in the <rpc-reply> should follow the same top-level order as the request, but this should not be relied on to always be the case.

Duplicate or overlapping subtrees within the request will be combined in the output, so the common ancestor nodes are not duplicated in the reply.

XML namespaces are optional to use:

  • If there is no namespace in affect for a filter component, or the 'NETCONF' namespace is in effect, the server will attempt to find any top-level data node which matches.
  • Namespaces within descendant nodes of the <filter> node children are inherited from their parent. If none is in effect, then the first matching child node for the current parent node will be used.
  • Invalid namespace errors for the <filter> element are suppressed in the server. An invalid namespace or unknown element is simply a 'no-match' condition.

For example, the following PDU would be valid, even though it is not technically valid XML:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="8"> 
   <nc:get> 
      <nc:filter>
         <nacm> 
           <rules/> 
         </nacm> 
      </nc:filter> 
   </nc:get> 
</nc:rpc>

Note that there is no default namespace in effect for the <nacm> subtree. However, the server will accept this filter as if the yuma-nacm.yang module namespace was properly declared.

Subtree filters can select specific list entries using content match nodes. The following example would return the entire contents of the <interface> entry for 'eth0':


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="9"> 
   <nc:get> 
      <nc:filter type="subtree"> 
         <if:interfaces xmlns:if="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-interfaces"> 
            <if:interface> 
               <if:name>eth0</if:name> 
            </if:interface> 
         </if:interfaces> 
      </nc:filter> 
   </nc:get> 
</nc:rpc> 

To retrieve only specific nodes (such as counters) from a single list entry, use select nodes for the desired counter(s), and include a content match node for each key leaf. A missing key leaf will match any entry for that key.

The following example request shows how just the <inBytes> and <outBytes> counters could be retrieved from the <interface> entry for 'eth0'.


Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="10"> 
   <nc:get> 
      <nc:filter type="subtree"> 
         <if:interfaces xmlns:if="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-interfaces"> 
            <if:interface> 
               <if:name>eth0</if:name> 
               <if:counters> 
                  <if:inBytes/> 
                  <if:outBytes/> 
               </if:counters> 
            </if:interface> 
         </if:interfaces> 
      </nc:filter> 
   </nc:get> 
</nc:rpc> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="10"> 
   <nc:data> 
      <if:interfaces xmlns:if="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/interfaces"> 
         <if:interface> 
            <if:name>eth0</if:name> 
            <if:counters> 
               <if:inBytes>290046042</if:inBytes> 
               <if:outBytes>112808406</if:outBytes> 
            </if:counters> 
         </if:interface> 
      </if:interfaces> 
   </nc:data> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

Using XPath Filters

The :xpath capability is fully supported, including the YANG extensions to this capability.

The XPath 2.0 rule for default XML namespace behavior is used, not XPath 1.0 rules, as specified by the YANG language. This means that any module with a node with the same local-name, in the same position in the schema tree, will match a missing XML prefix. This allows much simpler specification of XPath filters, but it may match more nodes than intended. Remember that any nodes added via an external YANG augment statement may have the same local-name, even though they are bound to a different XML namespace.

If the XPath expression does not return a node-set result, then the empty <data/> element will be returned in the <rpc-reply>.

If no nodes in the node-set result exist in the specified target database, then an empty <data/> element will be returned in the <rpc-reply>.

If a node in the result node-set matches a node in the target database, then it is included in the <rpc-reply>,

If a node selected for retrieval are contained within a YANG list node, then all the key leaf nodes for the specific list entry will be returned in the response.

The powerful '//' operator (equivalent to "descendant-or-self::node()") can be used to construct really simple XPath expressions.

The following example shows how a simple filter like '//name' will return nodes from all over the database, yet they can all be fully identified because the path from root is part of the response data.


Example Request:

  • xget //name


<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="43"> 
   <nc:get> 
      <nc:filter type="xpath" select="//name"/> 
   </nc:get> 
</nc:rpc>]]>]]> 

Example Reply:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="43"> 
   <nc:data> 
      <nacm:nacm xmlns:nacm="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/nacm"> 
         <nacm:rules> 
            <nacm:data-rule> 
               <nacm:name>nacm-tree</nacm:name> 
            </nacm:data-rule> 
            <nacm:data-rule> 
               <nacm:name>itf-1</nacm:name> 
            </nacm:data-rule> 
         </nacm:rules> 
      </nacm:nacm> 
      <t:xpath.1 xmlns:t="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/test"> 
         <t:name>barney</t:name> 
      </t:xpath.1> 
      <if:interfaces xmlns:if="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/interfaces"> 
         <if:interface> 
            <if:name>lo</if:name> 
         </if:interface> 
         <if:interface> 
            <if:name>eth0</if:name> 
         </if:interface> 
         <if:interface> 
            <if:name>virbr0</if:name> 
         </if:interface> 
         <if:interface> 
            <if:name>pan0</if:name> 
         </if:interface> 
      </if:interfaces> 
      <ns:netconf-state           xmlns:ns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:monitoring"> 
         <ns:datastores> 
            <ns:datastore> 
               <ns:name> 
                  <ns:candidate/> 
               </ns:name> 
            </ns:datastore> 
            <ns:datastore> 
               <ns:name> 
                  <ns:running/> 
               </ns:name> 
            </ns:datastore> 
            <ns:datastore> 
               <ns:name> 
                  <ns:startup/> 
               </ns:name> 
            </ns:datastore> 
         </ns:datastores> 
      </ns:netconf-state> 
      <manageEvent:netconf     xmlns:manageEvent="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netmod:notification"> 
         <manageEvent:streams> 
            <manageEvent:stream> 
               <manageEvent:name>NETCONF</manageEvent:name> 
            </manageEvent:stream> 
         </manageEvent:streams> 
      </manageEvent:netconf> 
   </nc:data> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

In order to refine the previous filter to select nodes from just one module, the use the XML prefix in the node identifier. The example below selects only the <name> nodes from the interfaces module.


Example Request:

  • xget //if:name


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="44"> 
   <nc:get> 
      <nc:filter type="xpath" 
         xmlns:if="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/interfaces" 
         select="//if:name"/> 
   </nc:get> 
</nc:rpc>

Example Reply:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<nc:rpc-reply xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   message-id="44"> 
   <nc:data> 
      <if:interfaces xmlns:if="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/interfaces"> 
         <if:interface> 
            <if:name>lo</if:name> 
         </if:interface> 
         <if:interface> 
            <if:name>eth0</if:name> 
         </if:interface> 
         <if:interface> 
            <if:name>virbr0</if:name> 
         </if:interface> 
         <if:interface> 
            <if:name>pan0</if:name> 
         </if:interface> 
      </if:interfaces> 
   </nc:data> 
</nc:rpc-reply>

Using Time Filters

The module yuma-time-filter.yang defines a timestamp mechanism to help reduce polling overhead for a client.

  • Timestamps are specified in date-and-time format (from the ietf-yang-types.yang module).
  • The timestamp parameter 'if-modified-since' is added to the <get> and <get-config> operations.
  • The timestamp monitoring node 'last-modified' is added to the /netconf-state/datastores/datastore list.
  • The XML attribute 'last-modified' is added to the <rpc-reply> element for replies to <get> and <get-config> operations.
  • The per-datastore last modified timestamp is for the entire datastore contents. If the 'if-modified-since' parameter is present in the <get> or <get-config> request, the the server will check the corresponding 'last-modified' timestamp.
    • If the 'last-modified' timestamp is more recent than the 'if-modified-since' value, then the <get> or <get-config> operation is processed as normal.
    • If the 'last-modified' timestamp is not more recent than the 'if-modified-since' value, then the <get> or <get-config> operation is not processed. Instead, an empty <data> element is returned. The 'last-modified' XML attribute in the <rpc-reply> will indicate the last modification timestamp for the datastore.

Example Request:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
 <get-config xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0"> 
    <source> 
      <running/> 
    </source> 
    <if-modified-since 
    xmlns="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/yuma-time-filter">
      2011-08-21T21:51:46Z</if-modified-since> 
  </get-config>
</rpc>

Empty reply because datastore not modified since specified time:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<rpc-reply message-id="4" 
   xmlns:nc="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0" 
   last-modified="2011-08-21T17:51:46Z" 
   xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0"> 
 <data></data> 
</rpc-reply> 

Notifications

The netconfd server supports all the capabilities of RFC 5277, and the notification monitoring portion of the ietf-netconf-monitoring.yang data model. There are also some proprietary notifications defined in yuma-system.yang.

Subscriptions

The <create-subscription> operation is used to start receiving notification.

It can be used in 4 different modes:

  • Get all or some of the stored notifications.
    • <startTime> and <stopTime> parameters used; The stop time is in the past.
  • Get all or some of the stored notifications, then receive live notifications until some point in the future.
    • <startTime> and <stopTime> parameters used; The stop time is in the future.
  • Get all or some of the stored notifications, then start receiving live notifications until the session is terminated.
    • <startTime> parameter used, but <stopTime> parameter is not used
  • Start receiving live notifications until the session is terminated
    • neither <startTime> or <startTime> are used

Once a subscription is started, notifications may start arriving, after the <rpc-reply> for the <create-subscription> operation is sent.

If the <startTime> parameter is used, then zero or more stored notifications will be returned, followed by the <replayComplete> notification.

If the <stopTime> parameter is also used, then the <notificationComplete> notification will be sent when this stop time has passed. After that, no more notifications will be sent to the session, and the subscription is terminated. After this point, another subscription could be started.

Only one subscription can be active on a session at a time. There is no way to terminate a subscription, other than to close the session.

Notification Log

Each system event is saved to the notification replay buffer.

The <replayComplete> and <notificationComplete> notifications are not saved to this buffer because they are subscription-specific events, and not system events.

The size of the replay buffer is controlled by the --eventlog-size configuration parameter.

The default size is 1000 events.

The oldest event will be deleted when a new event is added, when this limit is reached.

If --eventlog-size is set to zero, then there will be no replayed notifications available, and the <replayComplete> notification will be sent right away, if <startTIme> is present.

Each event in the replay buffer is assigned a sequential sequence ID, starting from 1.

The <sequence-id> leaf is an unsigned 32-bit integer, which is added to the <notification> element, after the event element. This sequence can be used to debug filters by comparing the sequence IDs of the notifications that were delivered against the expected sequence IDs.

Using Notification Filters

A notification filter is different than a <get> or <get-config> filter.

Instead of selecting sub-trees of the specified database, it is treated as a boolean expression. If the filter matches the content in the notification, then the notification is sent to that subscription. If the filter does not match the content, then the notification is not sent to that subscription.

A filter match for notification purposes means that the filter is conceptually applied, as if it were a <get> operation, and if any nodes are selected (non-empty result node-set), then the filter is a match. If no content is selected (empty result node-set), then the filter is not a match.

The first node that can appear in the filter is the event type. The <eventTime> and <sequence-id> nodes are siblings of the event type element, so they cannot be used in a notification filter.

<notification> Element

The notification element contains 2 or 3 child elements, in this order:

  1. eventTime: timestamp for the event. The namespace URI for this element is "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:notification:1.0"
  2. eventType: The real name will be the name of the YANG notification, such as 'sysStartup'. The contents of this element will depend on the YANG notification definition. The namespace URI for this element will be different for every event type. It will be the same value as the YANG namespace statement in the module that defines the notification statement for the particular event type.
  3. sequence-id: The system event sequence ID. Session or subscription specific events, such as 'replayComplete' and 'notficationComplete' do not have this element. The namespace URI for this element is "http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system".

<replayComplete> Event

The <replayComplete> event is generated on a subscription that requested notification replay (by supplying the <startTime> parameter).

This event type cannot be filtered out. The server will always attempt to deliver this notification event type when it is generated.


<replayComplete> notification


Description: Buffered notification delivery has ended for a subscription
Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 0
YANG file: nc-notifications.yang

Example:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<ncEvent:notification
     xmlns:ncEvent="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:notification:1.0"> 
   <ncEvent:eventTime>2009-07-29T17:21:37Z</ncEvent:eventTime> 
   <manageEvent:replayComplete
      xmlns:manageEvent="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netmod:notification"/> 
</ncEvent:notification>

<notificationComplete> Event

The <notificationComplete> event is generated on a subscription that requested notification replay, and requested that the notification delivery stop (i.e., terminate subscription), after a certain time, using the <stopTime> parameter.

This event type cannot be filtered out. The server will always attempt to deliver this notification event type when it is generated.


<notificationComplete> notification


Description: All notification delivery has ended, and the subscription is terminated.
Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 0
YANG file: nc-notifications.yang

Example:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<ncEvent:notification
     xmlns:ncEvent="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:notification:1.0"> 
   <ncEvent:eventTime>2009-07-29T17:31:22Z</ncEvent:eventTime> 
   <manageEvent:notificationComplete
      xmlns:manageEvent="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netmod:notification"/> 
</ncEvent:notification>

<sysStartup> Event

The <sysStartup> event is the first notification generated when the server starts or restarts. It contains the startup file source (if any) and lists any <rpc-error> contents that were detected at boot-time, during the copying of the startup configuration into the running configuration.


<sysStartup> notification


Description: The netconfd server has started
Min parameters: 0
Max parameters: 2
YANG file: yuma-system.yang

Parameters:

  • startupSource
    • type: string
    • usage: optional (will not be present if --no-startup was present)
    • This parameter identifies the local file specification associated with the source of the startup configuration contents.
  • bootError
    • type: list (same structure as <rpc-error> element)
    • usage: optional (will only be present if errors were recorded during boot)
    • There will be one entry for each <rpc-error> encountered during the load config operation. The <rpc-error> fields are used directly.
    • There is no particular order, so no key is defined.
    • All fields except <error-info> will be present from the original <rpc-error> that was generated during the boot process.

Example:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<ncEvent:notification xmlns:ncEvent="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:notification:1.0"> 
   <ncEvent:eventTime>2009-07-29T17:21:13Z</ncEvent:eventTime> 
   <sys:sysStartup xmlns:sys="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system"> 
      <sys:startupSource> 
         /home/andy/swdev/yuma/trunk/netconf/data/startup-cfg.xml 
      </sys:startupSource> 
   </sys:sysStartup> 
   <sys:sequence-id 
      xmlns:sys="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system">1
  </sys:sequence-id> 
</ncEvent:notification>

<sysSessionStart> Event

The <sysSessionStart> notification is generated when a NETCONF session is started.

The username, remote address, and session ID that was assigned are returned in the event payload.


<sysSessionStart> notification


Description: A new NETCONF session has started.
Min parameters: 3
Max parameters: 3
YANG file: yuma-system.yang

Parameters:

  • userName
    • type: string
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter identifies the SSH user name that is associated with the session.
  • sessionId
    • type: uint32 (range 1 to max)
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter identifies the NETCONF session ID assigned to the session.
  • remoteHost
    • type: inet:ip-address
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter identifies the remote host IP address that is associated with the session.

Example:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<ncEvent:notification xmlns:ncEvent="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:notification:1.0"> 
   <ncEvent:eventTime>2009-07-29T21:53:04Z</ncEvent:eventTime> 
   <sys:sysSessionStart xmlns:sys="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system"> 
      <sys:userName>andy</sys:userName> 
      <sys:sessionId>2</sys:sessionId> 
      <sys:remoteHost>192.168.0.6</sys:remoteHost> 
   </sys:sysSessionStart> 
   <sys:sequence-id
      xmlns:sys="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system">4
   </sys:sequence-id> 
</ncEvent:notification>

<sysSessionEnd> Event

The <sysSessionEnd> notification is generated when a NETCONF session is terminated.

The username, remote address, and session ID that was assigned are returned in the event payload. The termination reason is also included.

If the session was terminated before it properly started, it is possible that there will not be a <sysSessionStart> notification event to match the <sysSessionEnd> event. For example, if the initial SSH connection setup fails before the <hello> message is processed, then only a <sysSessionEnd> notification event will be generated. In this case, the user name and other session information may not be available.


<sysSessionEnd> notification


Description: A NETCONF session has terminated.
Min parameters: 1
Max parameters: 5
YANG file: yuma-system.yang

Parameters:

  • userName
    • type: string
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter identifies the SSH user name that is associated with the session.
  • sessionId
    • type: uint32 (range 1 to max)
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter identifies the NETCONF session ID assigned to the session.
  • remoteHost
    • type: inet:ip-address
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter identifies the remote host IP address that is associated with the session.
  • killedBy
    • type: uint32 (range 1 to max)
    • usage: optional (will only be present if the terminationReason leaf is equal to 'killed'.
    • This parameter identifies the session number of the session that issued the <kill-session> operation.
  • terminationReason
    • type: enumeration (closed, killed, dropped, timeout, bad-start, bad-hello, other)
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter indicates why the session was terminated.

Example:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<ncEvent:notification xmlns:ncEvent="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:notification:1.0"> 
   <ncEvent:eventTime>2009-07-29T21:53:12Z</ncEvent:eventTime> 
   <sys:sysSessionEnd xmlns:sys="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system"> 
      <sys:userName>andy</sys:userName> 
      <sys:sessionId>2</sys:sessionId> 
      <sys:remoteHost>192.168.0.6</sys:remoteHost> 
      <sys:terminationReason>closed</sys:terminationReason> 
   </sys:sysSessionEnd> 
   <sys:sequence-id
         xmlns:sys="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system">5
   </sys:sequence-id> 
</ncEvent:notification>

<sysConfigChange> Event

The <sysConfigChange> notification is generated when the <running> configuration database is altered by a NETCONF session.

If the :candidate capability is supported, then this event is generated when the <commit> operation completes.

If the :writable-running capability is supported instead, then this even is generated when the <edit-config> operation completes.

The user name, remote address, and session ID that made the change are reported.

A summary of the changes that were made is also included in the event payload.

If multiple changes are made at once, then one <sysConfigChange> event will be generated for each change. There is no significance to the order that these events are generated.


<sysConfigChange> notification


Description: The <running> configuration has been changed by a NETCONF session.
Min parameters: 4
Max parameters: 4
YANG file: yuma-system.yang

Parameters:

  • userName
    • type: string
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter identifies the SSH user name that is associated with the session.
  • sessionId
    • type: uint32 (range 1 to max)
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter identifies the NETCONF session ID assigned to the session.
  • remoteHost
    • type: inet:ip-address
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter identifies the remote host IP address that is associated with the session.
  • edit
    • list (with no key) of edit operations performed, 1 entry for each edit:
      • target
        • type: instance-identifier
        • usage: mandatory
        • This parameter contains the absolute path expression of the database object node that was modified.
      • operation
        • type: enumeration (merge, replace, create, delete)
        • usage: mandatory
        • This parameter identifies the nc:operation that was performed on the target node in the database.

Example:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<ncEvent:notification xmlns:ncEvent="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:notification:1.0"> 
   <ncEvent:eventTime>2009-07-29T22:21:18Z</ncEvent:eventTime> 
   <sys:sysConfigChange xmlns:sys="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system"> 
      <sys:userName>andy</sys:userName> 
      <sys:sessionId>3</sys:sessionId> 
      <sys:remoteHost>192.168.0.6</sys:remoteHost> 
      <sys:edit>
         <sys:target> 
         /nd:config/nacm:nacm/nacm:groups/nacm:group[nacm:groupIdentity=nacm:admin] 
         </sys:target> 
         <sys:operation>create</sys:operation> 
      </sys:edit>
   </sys:sysConfigChange> 
   <sys:sequence-id
      xmlns:sys="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system">7</sys:sequence-id> 
</ncEvent:notification>

<sysCapabilityChange> Event

The <sysCapabilityChange> notification is generated when the set of active capabilities for the server has changed.

The most common way this notification is generated is after the <load> operation has been used to add a new YANG module to the system.

It is possible that this notification will be generated for removal of capabilities. However, at this time, there are no NETCONF capabilities that can be removed from the running system.

The <added-capability> leaf list will contain the capability URI for each new capability that has just been added.

The <deleted-capability> leaf list will contain the capability URI for each existing capability that has just been deleted.

The <changedBy> container will identity whether the server or a NETCONF session caused the capability change.

If the change was made by the server, then this container will have an empty leaf named <server>.

If the change was made by a NETCONF session, the user name, remote address, and session ID for the session that caused the change are reported.

If multiple changes are made at once, then one <sysCapabilityChange> event will be generated for all the changes. There will be multiple instances of the <added-capability> or <deleted-capability> leaf-list elements in this case.

When this notification is generated, the ietf-netconf-monitoring data model <capabilities> data structure is updated to reflect the changes.


<sysCapabilityChange> notification


Description: The set of currently active <capability> URIs has changed
Min parameters: 2
Max parameters: 5
YANG file: yuma-system.yang

Parameters:

  • choice changed-by (server or by-user)
    • server
      • type: empty
      • usage: mandatory
      • If this empty leaf is present, then the server caused the capability change.
    • case by-user (if a NETCONF session caused the capability change)
      • userName
        • type: string
        • usage: mandatory
        • This parameter identifies the SSH user name that is associated with the session.
      • sessionId
        • type: uint32 (range 1 to max)
        • usage: mandatory
        • This parameter identifies the NETCONF session ID assigned to the session.
      • remoteHost
        • type: inet:ip-address
        • usage: mandatory
        • This parameter identifies the remote host IP address that is associated with the session.
  • added-capability
    • type:leaf-list of capability URI strings
    • usage: optional
    • This parameter contains one entry for each capability that was just added
  • deleted-capability
    • type:leaf-list of capability URI strings
    • usage: optional
    • This parameter contains one entry for each capability that was just deleted.

Example:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<ncEvent:notification xmlns:ncEvent="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:notification:1.0"> 
   <ncEvent:eventTime>2009-07-29T23:03:06Z</ncEvent:eventTime> 
   <sys:sysCapabilityChange xmlns:sys="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system"> 
      <sys:changed-by> 
         <sys:userName>andy</sys:userName> 
         <sys:sessionId>3</sys:sessionId> 
         <sys:remoteHost>192.168.0.61</sys:remoteHost> 
      </sys:changed-by> 
      <sys:added-capability> 
         http://netconfcentral.org/ns/toaster?module=toaster&revision=2009-06-23&features=clock 
      </sys:added-capability> 
   </sys:sysCapabilityChange> 
   <sys:sequence-id
      xmlns:sys="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system">8
   </sys:sequence-id> 
</ncEvent:notification>

<sysConfirmedCommit> Event

The <sysConfirmedCommit> notification is generated when the state of the confirmed-commit procedure has changed.

The confirmed-commit procedure is started when a <commit> operation with a <confirmed/> parameter is executed.

A <sysConfirmedCommit> notification is generated several times for a single confirmed-commit procedure. One or more of the following sub-events will be generated:

  • start: A confirmed-commit procedure has started.
    • Sent once when the first <commit> operation is executed.
    • This event starts the confirmed-commit procedure.
    • If the <candidate> database is not altered, then the confirmed commit procedure will be skipped.
  • cancel: A confirmed-commit procedure has been canceled
    • Sent only if the original session is terminated.
    • This event terminates the confirmed-commit procedure.
  • timeout: A confirmed-commit procedure has timed out.
    • Sent only if the confirm-timeout interval expires.
    • This event terminates the confirmed-commit procedure.
  • extend: A confirmed-commit procedure has been extended.
    • Sent if the 2nd to N-1th <confirm> operation contains a <confirmed/> parameter.
    • This event restarts the confirm-timeout interval, but does not reset the backup database.
    • Any new changes in the <candidate> database will be committed.
  • complete: A confirmed-commit procedure has completed.
    • Sent if the 2nd to Nth <commit> operation is executed before the confirm-timeout interval expires.
    • This event terminates the confirmed-commit procedure.
<sysConfirmedCommit> notification


Description: The state of the confirmed-commit procedure has changed.
Min parameters: 1
Max parameters: 4
YANG file: yuma-system.yang

Parameters:

  • userName
    • type: string
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter identifies the SSH user name that is associated with the session that caused the confirmed-commit procedure state change.
  • sessionId
    • type: uint32 (range 1 to max)
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter identifies the NETCONF session ID assigned to the session.
  • remoteHost
    • type: inet:ip-address
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter identifies the remote host IP address that is associated with the session.
  • confirmEvent
    • type: enumeration (start, cancel, timeout, extend, complete)
    • usage: mandatory
    • This parameter indicates why the confirmed-commit procedure changed state.

Example:


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> 
<ncEvent:notification xmlns:ncEvent="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:notification:1.0"> 
   <ncEvent:eventTime>2009-08-29T23:03:06Z</ncEvent:eventTime> 
   <sys:sysConfirmedCommit xmlns:sys="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system"> 
      <sys:userName>andy</sys:userName> 
      <sys:sessionId>3</sys:sessionId> 
      <sys:remoteHost>192.168.0.61</sys:remoteHost>
      <sys:confirmEvent>start</sys:confirmEvent>
   </sys:sysConfirmedCommit>
   <sys:sequence-id
      xmlns:sys="http://netconfcentral.org/ns/system">9
   </sys:sequence-id> 
</ncEvent:notification>

CLI Reference

The netconfd program uses command line interface (CLI) parameters to control program behavior.

The following sections document all the Yuma CLI parameters relevant to this program, in alphabetical order.

--audit-log

The --audit-log parameter specifies the file path of the configuration edit audit log. If this parameter is present, then edits to the running database will cause an audit log entry to be created for each edit point. This is done in addition to normal logging, but it is not affected by the –log-level parameter.


--audit-log parameter


Syntax filespec
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd \
  --audit-log=/var/log/nc-audit.log&

--audit-log-append

The --audit-log-append parameter specifies that the existing audit log file (if any) should be appended, instead of deleted. It is ignored unless the --audit-log parameter is present.


--audit-log-append parameter


Syntax empty
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd \
  --audit-log=/var/log/ncaudit.log \
  --audit-log-append&

--access-control

The --access-control parameter specifies how access control is enforced in the netconfd program.

It is an enumeration with the following values:

  • enforcing: All configured access control rules will be enforced.
  • permissive: All configured access control rules will be enforced for write and execute requests. All read requests will be allowed, unless the requested object contains the nacm:very-secure extension. In that case, all configured access control rules will be enforced, and no default access will be allowed.
  • disabled: All read, write, and execute requests will be allowed, unless the object contains the nacm:secure or nacm:very-secure extension.
    • If the nacm:secure extension is in effect, then all configured access control rules will be enforced for write and execute requests.
    • If the nacm:very-secure extension is in effect, then all configured access control rules will be enforced for all requests. Use this mode with caution.
  • off: All access control enforcement is disabled. Use this mode with extreme caution.
--access-control parameter


Syntax enumeration:

enforcing permissive disabled off

Default: enforcing
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd \
  --access-control=permissive

--config

The --config parameter specifies the name of a Yuma configuration file that contains more parameters to process, in addition to the CLI parameters.

Refer to the 'Configuration Files' section for details on the format of this file.

--config parameter


Syntax string: complete file specification of the text file to parse for more parameters.
Default: /etc/yuma/<program-name>.conf
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd \
  --config=~/testconf.conf

--datapath

The --datapath parameter specifies the directory search path to use while searching for data files. It consists of a colon (':') separated list of path specifications, commonly found in Unix, such as the $PATH environment variable.

This parameter overrides the $YUMA_DATAPATH environment variable, if it is present.

--datapath parameter


Syntax string: list of directory specifications
Default: $YUMA_DATAPATH environment variable
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd \
  --datapath=”~/work2:~/data”

--default-style

The --default-style parameter specifies the way leafs with default values are returned from the server for data retrieval operations. This setting will be used as the default behavior when processing the operations that support the <with-defaults> extension, and no value is provided.

The values and their meanings are defined in ietf-with-defaults.yang. Here is a summary:

  • report-all: Report all nodes as the default behavior. The will be the behavior used if this parameter is not specified.
  • trim: Report only nodes that do not have the server-assigned value, as the default behavior. This includes all leafs with a YANG default and any other node created by the server.
  • explicit: Report only nodes that have been set by client action, as the default behavior. Any node created via the <startup> configuration at boot-time is considered to be a client-created node. It does not matter what the actual values are, with respect to YANG defaults or server-supplied defaults. Any nodes created by the server are skipped.
--default-style parameter


Syntax enumeration: report-all trim explicit
Default: report-all
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd \
  --default-style=trim

--delete-empty-npcontainers

The --delete-empty-npcontainers parameter is a boolean that indicates whether the server should keep or delete empty non-presence containers in the database.

If 'true', empty NP containers will be deleted. If 'false', they will not be deleted.


--delete-empty-npcontainers parameter


Syntax boolean
Default: FALSE
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd \
  --delete-empty-npcontainers=true

--deviation

The --deviation parameter is a leaf-list of modules that should be loaded automatically when the program starts, as a deviation module. In this mode, only the deviation statements are parsed and then made available later when the module that contains the objects being deviated is parsed.

The deviations must be known to the parser before the target module is parsed.

This parameter is used to identify any modules that have deviation statements for the set of modules being parsed (e.g., --module and --subtree parameters).

A module can be listed with both the --module and --deviation parameters, but that is not needed unless the module contains external deviations. If the module only contains deviations for objects in the same module, then the --deviation parameter does not need to be used.

The program will attempt to load each module in deviation parsing mode, in the order the parameters are entered.

For the netconfd program, If any modules have fatal errors then the program will terminate.

For the yangdump and yangcli programs, each module will be processed as requested.


--deviation parameter


Syntax module name or filespec
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: unlimited
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdump
Example: netconfd \
  --deviation=test1_deviations

--eventlog-size

The --eventlog-size parameter controls the maximum number of events that will be stored in the notification replay buffer by the netconfd server.

If set to 0, then notification replay will be disabled, meaning that all requests for replay subscriptions will cause the <replayComplete> event to be sent right away, since there are no stored notifications.

The server will delete the oldest entry, when this limit is reached and a new event is added to the replay buffer.

No memory is actually set aside for the notification replay buffer, so memory limits may be reached before the maximum number of events is actually stored, at any given time.

--eventlog-size parameter


Syntax uint32
Default: 1000
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --eventlog-size=20000

--feature-disable

The --feature-disable parameter directs all programs to disable a specific feature.

This parameter is a formatted string containing a module name, followed by a colon ':', followed by a feature name, e.g.,


    test:feature1

It is an error if a --feature-enable and --feature-disable parameter specify the same feature.

Parameters for unknown features will be ignored.

--feature-disable parameter


Syntax formatted string (module:feature
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: unlimited
Supported by: yangcliyangdiffyangdumpnetconfd
Example: netconfd\
    --feature-disable=test:feature1

--feature-enable

The --feature-enable parameter directs all programs to enable a specific feature.

This parameter is a formatted string containing a module name, followed by a colon ':', followed by a feature name, e.g.,


    test:feature1

It is an error if a --feature-disable and --feature-enable parameter specify the same feature.

Parameters for unknown features will be ignored.

--feature-enable parameter


Syntax formatted string (module:feature
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: unlimited
Supported by: yangcliyangdiffyangdumpnetconfd
Example: netconfd
    --feature-enable=test:feature1

--feature-enable-default

The --feature-enable-default parameter controls how yangdump will generate C code for YANG features by default.

If 'true', then by default, features will be enabled.

If 'false', then by default, features will be disabled.

If a --feature-enable or --feature-disable parameter is present for a specific feature, then this parameter will be ignored for that feature.


--feature-enable-default parameter


Syntax boolean (true or false)
Default: TRUE
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: yangcliyangdiffyangdumpnetconfd
Example: netconfd \
   --feature-enable-default=false

--hello-timeout

The --hello-timeout parameter controls the maximum number of seconds that the netconfd server will wait for a <hello> PDU, for each session.

If set to 0, then hello state timeouts will be disabled, meaning that no sessions will be deleted while waiting for a <hello> PDU.

It is strongly suggested that this parameter not be disabled, since a denial-of-service attack will be possible if sessions are allowed to remain in the 'hello wait' state forever. A finite number of SSH and NETCONF sessions are supported, so if an attacker simply opened lots of SSH connections to the netconf subsystem, the server would quickly run out of available sessions.

Sessions cannot be deleted manually via <kill-session> operation if no new sessions are being allocated by the server.


--hello-timeout parameter


Syntax uint32; 0 == disabled;

range 10 .. 3600 seconds (1 hour max)

Default: 600 (10 minutes)
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --hello-timeout=300

--help

The --help parameter causes program help text to be printed, and then the program will exit instead of running as normal.

This parameter can be combined with the --help-mode parameter to control the verbosity of the help text. Use --brief for less, and --full for more than the normal verbosity.

This parameter can be combined with the --version parameter in all programs. It can also be combined with the --show-errors parameter in yangdump.

The program configuration parameters will be displayed in alphabetical order, not in schema order.

--help parameter


Syntax empty
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd --help

--help-mode

The --help-mode parameter is used to control the amount of detail printed when help text is requested in some command. It is always used with another command, and makes no sense by itself. It is ignored unless used with the --help parameter.


--help-mode parameter


Syntax choice of 3 empty leafs

--brief --normal --full

Default: normal
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd --help --help-mode=full
  • default choice: normal
  • choice help-mode
    • brief
      • type: empty
      • This parameter specifies that brief documentation mode should be used.
    • normal
      • type: empty
      • This parameter specifies that normal documentation mode should be used.
    • full
      • type: empty
      • This parameter specifies that full documentation mode should be used.

--idle-timeout

The --idle-timeout parameter controls the maximum number of seconds that the netconfd server will wait for a <rpc> PDU, for each session.

If set to 0, then idle state timeouts will be disabled, meaning that no sessions will be deleted while waiting for a <rpc> PDU.

A session will never be considered idle while a notification subscription is active.

It is strongly suggested that this parameter not be disabled, since a denial-of-service attack will be possible if sessions are allowed to remain in the 'idle wait' state forever. A finite number of SSH and NETCONF sessions are supported, so if an attacker simply opened lots of SSH connections to the netconf subsystem, the server would quickly run out of available sessions.

This parameter will affect a <confirmed-commit> operation!

Make sure this timeout interval is larger than the value of the <confirm-timeout> parameter used in the confirmed commit procedure. Otherwise, it is possible that the session will be terminated before the confirm-timeout interval has expired, effectively replacing that timer with this one.


--idle-timeout parameter


Syntax uint32; 0 == disabled;

range 30 .. 360000 seconds (100 hours max)

Default: 3600 (1 hour)
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --idle-timeout=30000

--indent

The --indent parameter specifies the number of spaces that will be used to add to the indentation level, each time a child node is printed during program operation.


--indent parameter


Syntax uint32 (0 .. 9)
Default: 2
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd --indent=4

--log

The --log parameter specifies the file name to be used for logging program messages, instead of STDOUT. It can be used with the optional --log-append and --log-level parameters to control how the log file is written.


--log parameter


Syntax string: log file specification
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd --log=~/server.log&

--log-append

The --log-append parameter specifies that the existing log file (if any) should be appended , instead of deleted. It is ignored unless the --log parameter is present.


--log-append parameter


Syntax empty
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd --log-append \
  --log=~/server.log&

--log-level

The --log-level parameter controls the verbosity level of messages printed to the log file or STDOUT, if no log file is specified.

The log levels are incremental, meaning that each higher level includes everything from the previous level, plus additional messages.

There are 7 settings that can be used:

  • none: All logging is suppressed. Use with extreme caution!
  • error: Error messages are printed, indicating problems that require attention.
  • warn: Warning messages are printed, indicating problems that may require attention.
  • info: Informational messages are printed, that indicate program status changes.
  • debug: Debugging messages are printed that indicate program activity.
  • debug2: Protocol debugging and trace messages are enabled.
  • debug3: Very verbose debugging messages are enabled. This has an impact on resources and performance, and should be used with caution.
log-level parameter


Syntax enumeration: off error warn info debug debug2 debug3 debug4
Default: --info (--debug for DEBUG builds)
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd --log-level=debug \
  --log=~/server.log&

--max-burst

The --max-burst parameter specifies the maximum number of notifications to send in a burst, to one session. Even though TCP will control the transmission rate, this parameter can limit the memory usage due to buffering of notifications waiting to be sent.

The value zero means no limit will be used at all.

--max-burst parameter


Syntax uint32
Default: 10
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcli
Example: netconfd --max-burst=100

--modpath

The --modpath parameter specifies the YANG module search path to use while searching for YANG files. It consists of a colon (':') separated list of path specifications, commonly found in Unix, such as the $PATH environment variable.

This parameter overrides the $YUMA_MODPATH environment variable, if it is present.


--modpath parameter


Syntax string: list of directory specifications
Default: $YUMA_MODPATH environment variable
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd \
  --modpath=”~/testmodules:~/modules:~/trunk/netconf/modules”

--module

The --module parameter is a leaf-list of modules that should be loaded automatically when the program starts.

The program will attempt to load each module in the order the parameters were entered.

For the netconfd program, If any modules have fatal errors then the program will terminate.

For the yangdump program, each module will be processed as requested.


--module parameter


Syntax module name or filespec
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: unlimited
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdump
Example: netconfd \
  --module=test1 \
  --module=test2

--port

The --port parameter specifies the TCP port number(S) that should be used for NETCONF sessions.

This parameter specifies the TCP port numbers to accept NETCONF session from. If any instances of this parameter are found, then the default (port 830) will not be added automatically. Up to 4 port parameter values can be entered.


--port parameter


Syntax uint32
Default: 830
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 4
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --port=22 \
   --port=830

--protocols

The --protocols parameter specifies which NETCONF protocol versions should be enabled.The base:1.0 (RFC 4741/4742) and base:1.1 (RFC 6241/6242) capabilities are controlled with this parameter.


--protocols parameter


Syntax bits
Default: netconf1.0 netconf1.1
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd –protocols=netconf1.0

--running-error

The --running-error parameter is an enumeration, specifying how the netconfd server will treat errors encountered while validating the running database, when loaded from the non-volatile startup configuration at boot-time.

  • leaf running-error
    • type: enumeration (stop or continue)
    • Specifies if running configuration errors will be treated as fatal or recoverable errors.
startup-error parameter


Syntax enum: stop continue
Default: stop
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --running-error=continue

--runpath

The --runpath parameter specifies the server instrumentation library (SIL) search path to use while searching for library files. It consists of a colon (':') separated list of path specifications, commonly found in Unix, such as the $PATH environment variable.


This parameter overrides the $YUMA_RUNPATH environment variable, if it is present.If no path is specified or a SIL is not found, the directories /usr/lib/yuma and /usr/lib64/yuma (for 64-bit platforms) are checked.


--runpath parameter


Syntax string: list of directory specifications
Default: $YUMA_RUNPATH environment variable
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcli
Example: netconfd \
  --runpath=”~/testsil:/yuma/device”

--start

The --start parameter is a choice, specifying how the netconfd server will load the non-volatile startup configuration at boot-time. If no choice is made at all, then the server will check its data path for the file startup-cfg.xml.

  • choice start
    • no-startup
      • type: empty
      • Specifies that no configuration will be loaded at all at boot-time
    • factory-startup
      • type: empty
      • Force the system to use the factory configuration and delete the startup config file if it exists. Force the NV-storage startup to contain the factory default configuration.
    • startup
      • type: string
      • Specifies the file name of the boot-time configuration. The server expects this to be an XML configuration file. Unless a path specification is included, the $YUMA_DATAPATH environment variable or --datapath parameter will be used to search for the specified file name. No '.xml' extension will be added. The exact file name will be used instead.
start parameter


Syntax choice: --no-startup --factory-startup --startup=filespec
Default: first startup-cfg.xml in the data path
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd \
  --startup=$TESTDIR/testrun

--startup-error

The --startup-error parameter is an enumeration, specifying how the netconfd server will treat errors encountered while loading the non-volatile startup configuration at boot-time.

  • leaf startup-error
    • type: enumeration (stop or continue)
    • Specifies if startup configuration errors will be treated as fatal or recoverable errors.
startup-error parameter


Syntax enum: stop continue
Default: continue
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --startup-error=stop

--subdirs

The --subdirs parameter controls whether sub-directories should be searched or not, if they are found during a module search.

If false, the file search paths for modules, scripts, and data files will not include sub-directories if they exist in the specified path.


--subdirs parameter


Syntax boolean
Default: TRUE
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: yangdump
Example: netconfd \
  --subdirs=false

--superuser

The --superuser parameter specifies the user name that the netconfd server will treat as the super-user account. The 'root' account should be used with caution. It is strongly suggested that root access be disabled in sshd, and a different account be used as the NETCONF super-user account.

Any NETCONF session started with this user name will be exempt from access control enforcement. This is especially useful if the current yuma-nacm.yang configuration is preventing access to the <nacm> subtree itself. The super-user account can be used in this situation to repair the mis-configured access control rules.

By default, no user will be accepted as the super-user account, if no value is specified.

To disable all super-user account privileges, set this parameter to a zero-length string.


--superuser parameter


Syntax string
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --superuser=admin

--system-sorted

The --system-sorted parameter specifies whether the server will keep system-ordered lists and leaf-lists in sorted order.

If 'true', then lists and leaf-lists will be maintained in order, based on the list keys, or leaf-list value itself. If 'false', then system ordered entries will be kept in the order they were entered in the database.

All entries are maintained in schema-order (except list keys are ordered first).


--system-sorted parameter


Syntax boolean
Default: TRUE
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --system-sorted=false

--target

The --target parameter specifies the name of the database that netconfd will use as its edit target. There are two targets supported at this time:

  • running: Edits will be written directly to the <running> configuration. The :startup capability will also be used in this mode. This means that a <copy-config> operation (from <running> to <startup>) must be used to save any edits to non-volatile storage, for use on the next reboot.
  • candidate: Edits will be written to the <candidate> configuration. The <commit> operation must be used to save any edits in <candidate> configuration into the <running> configuration. The non-volatile storage is updated automatically in this mode, and the <startup> configuration will not be present.
--target parameter


Syntax enumeration: running candidate
Default: candidate
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --target=running

--usexmlorder

The --usexmlorder parameter specifies that the netconfd server should enforce XML ordering when applicable (such as YANG list key leafs entered first). The default is not to check for adherence to strict XML order, as defined by YANG.


--usexmlorder parameter


Syntax empty
Default: off
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --usexmlorder

--version

The --version parameter causes the program version string to be printed, and then the program will exit instead of running as normal.

All Yuma version strings use the same format:

DEBUG: <major>.<minor>.<svn-build-version>

or

NON-DEBUG: <major>.<minor>-<release>

An example version number that may be printed:


    netconfd 2.0-0


This parameter can be combined with the --help parameter.

--version parameter


Syntax empty
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd --version

--validate-config-only

If --validate-config-only parameter is present netconfd acts as command line YANG configuration validator. Loads the YANG schema modules, validates the startup configuration and exits without opening socket and listening for incoming sessions.

This parameter can be combined with the --startup parameter specifying the xml configuration file and --module parameter specifying the modules (SILs or YANG modules).


Syntax empty
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --validate-config-only --startup-error=stop --startup=startup-cfg-good.xml --module=/usr/share/yuma/modules/ietf/ietf-interfaces.yang --module=/usr/share/yuma/modules/ietf/iana-if-type.yang

--warn-idlen

The --warn-idlen parameter controls whether identifier length warnings will be generated.

The value zero disables all identifier length checking. If non-zero, then a warning will be generated if an identifier is defined which has a length is greater than this amount.

--warn-idlen parameter


Syntax uint32: 0 to disable, or 8 .. 1023
Default: 64
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd --warn-idlen=50

--warn-linelen

The --warn-linelen parameter controls whether line length warnings will be generated.

The value zero disables all line length checking. If non-zero, then a warning will be generated if a YANG file line is entered which has a length is greater than this amount.

Tab characters are counted as 8 spaces.


--warn-linelen parameter


Syntax uint32: 0 to disable, or 40 .. 4095
Default: 72
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd --warn-linelen=79

--warn-off

The --warn-off parameter suppresses a specific warning number.

The error and warning numbers, and the default messages, can be viewed with the yangdump program by using the --show-errors configuration parameter.

The specific warning message will be disabled for all modules. No message will be printed and the warning will not count towards the total for that module.


--warn-off parameter


Syntax uint32: 400 .. 899
Default: none
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 499
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd --warn-off=435
# revision order not descending

--with-startup

The --with-startup parameter controls whether the server will support the :startup capability or not. This is a memory intensive capability, and setting this parameter to 'false' will reduce memory usage during normal operations. The non-volatile copy of the <running> configuration will not be saved automatically if this capability is enabled. Instead, a <copy-config>operation from the <running> to <startup> configuration will be needed.

--with-startup parameter


Syntax boolean
Default: FALSE
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --with-startup=true

--with-url

The --with-url parameter controls whether the server will support the :url capability or not. This capability requires file system storage.

--with-url parameter


Syntax boolean
Default: TRUE
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --with-url=false

--with-validate

The --with-validate parameter controls whether the server will support the :validate capability or not. This is a memory intensive capability, and setting this parameter to 'false' will reduce memory usage during <edit-config> operations.

--with-validate parameter


Syntax boolean
Default: TRUE
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfd
Example: netconfd --with-validate=false

--yuma-home

The --yuma-home parameter specifies the project directory root to use when searching for files.

If present, this directory location will override the '$YUMA_HOME environment variable, if it is set. If this parameter is set to a zero-length string, then the $YUMA_HOME environment variable will be ignored.

The following directories are searched when either the $YUMA_HOME environment variable or this parameter is set:

  • $YUMA_HOME/modules
    • This sub-tree is searched for YANG files.
  • $YUMA_HOME/data
    • This directory is searched for data files.
  • $YUMA_HOME/scripts
    • This directory is searched for yangcli script files.
yuma-home parameter


Syntax string: directory specification
Default: $YUMA_HOME environment variable
Min Allowed: 0
Max Allowed: 1
Supported by: netconfdyangcliyangdiffyangdump
Example: netconfd \
  --yuma-home=~/sw/netconf \
  --log=~/server.log&