WO2003021415A1 - System and method for modeling a network device's configuration - Google Patents
System and method for modeling a network device's configuration Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- WO2003021415A1 WO2003021415A1 PCT/US2002/027386 US0227386W WO03021415A1 WO 2003021415 A1 WO2003021415 A1 WO 2003021415A1 US 0227386 W US0227386 W US 0227386W WO 03021415 A1 WO03021415 A1 WO 03021415A1
- Authority
- WO
- WIPO (PCT)
- Prior art keywords
- configuration
- schema
- representation
- network device
- dom
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Classifications
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L41/00—Arrangements for maintenance, administration or management of data switching networks, e.g. of packet switching networks
- H04L41/08—Configuration management of networks or network elements
- H04L41/085—Retrieval of network configuration; Tracking network configuration history
- H04L41/0853—Retrieval of network configuration; Tracking network configuration history by actively collecting configuration information or by backing up configuration information
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L41/00—Arrangements for maintenance, administration or management of data switching networks, e.g. of packet switching networks
- H04L41/02—Standardisation; Integration
- H04L41/0246—Exchanging or transporting network management information using the Internet; Embedding network management web servers in network elements; Web-services-based protocols
- H04L41/0266—Exchanging or transporting network management information using the Internet; Embedding network management web servers in network elements; Web-services-based protocols using meta-data, objects or commands for formatting management information, e.g. using eXtensible markup language [XML]
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L41/00—Arrangements for maintenance, administration or management of data switching networks, e.g. of packet switching networks
- H04L41/08—Configuration management of networks or network elements
- H04L41/0803—Configuration setting
- H04L41/0813—Configuration setting characterised by the conditions triggering a change of settings
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L41/00—Arrangements for maintenance, administration or management of data switching networks, e.g. of packet switching networks
- H04L41/08—Configuration management of networks or network elements
- H04L41/0866—Checking the configuration
- H04L41/0869—Validating the configuration within one network element
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L41/00—Arrangements for maintenance, administration or management of data switching networks, e.g. of packet switching networks
- H04L41/22—Arrangements for maintenance, administration or management of data switching networks, e.g. of packet switching networks comprising specially adapted graphical user interfaces [GUI]
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L69/00—Network arrangements, protocols or services independent of the application payload and not provided for in the other groups of this subclass
- H04L69/30—Definitions, standards or architectural aspects of layered protocol stacks
- H04L69/32—Architecture of open systems interconnection [OSI] 7-layer type protocol stacks, e.g. the interfaces between the data link level and the physical level
- H04L69/322—Intralayer communication protocols among peer entities or protocol data unit [PDU] definitions
- H04L69/328—Intralayer communication protocols among peer entities or protocol data unit [PDU] definitions in the presentation layer [OSI layer 6]
Definitions
- the present invention relates to network device configuration.
- the present invention relates to systems and methods for retrieving configurations from network devices and generating corresponding command models.
- BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION Networks, and in particular, the Internet, have revolutionized communications.
- CiscoTM routers are notoriously difficult to configure-especially in light of the new XML-based interfaces introduced by competitors such as Juniper NetworksTM. Instead of a user-friendly XML-based interface, CiscoTM uses a cumbersome command line interface (CLI ) for its routers.
- CLI command line interface
- Cisco'sTM CLI is the result of many years of semi-controlled modifications to its router operating systems and has resulted in a tangled mess of commands and subcommands. This cumbersome interface is one reason that CiscoTM requires that Cisco-certified engineers work on its routers.
- CiscoTM could reduce the complexity of its routers and reduce the need for Cisco-certified engineers by producing a user-friendly interface. If CiscoTM attempted to abandon its CLI in favor of such a user-friendly interface, however, many years of development and expertise could be lost. Moreover, even if it could develop a user- friendly interface, there is presently no economical way to integrate it into the thousands of existing CiscoTM routers. Despite the difficulties in implementing a more user-friendly interface, to remain competitive, CiscoTM and similarly situated companies need to move away from their present interfaces. Present technology, however, does not provide these companies with an acceptable option that allows continued use of their extensive interface knowledge base while simultaneously providing system administrators and network engineers with a user-friendly interface. Moreover, present technologies do not provide an acceptable way to provide backward compatibility of new user-friendly interfaces with existing network devices.
- CiscoTM of course, is not the only network device manufacturer to face this interface-upgrade problem. Many manufacturers would like to continue using their existing interface knowledge base while providing system administrators a user- friendly, consistent interface. Accordingly, a system and method are needed that will allow manufacturers, like CiscoTM, to create user-friendly interfaces for both next- generation and existing devices.
- the present invention can provide a system and method for modeling the configuration of a network device.
- a system could include a CLI-to-XML converter connected to a schema storage device or a CLI-to- XML converter in combination with a document object model (DOM) generator.
- DOM document object model
- Other embodiments could include, for example, a CLI-to-XML converter, a schema hash system, and a DOM generator.
- one embodiment of the present invention can model a network device's configuration by retrieving a the network device's configuration, in a native format, from the network device—or an alternate location—and converting it into a standard-format configuration such as an XML document or a DOM.
- This standard- format configuration provides system administrators with an easy-to-use, familiar device configuration format for different network devices. That is, instead of being forced to manipulate a difficult CLI-based configuration format, or other format system administrators can use the standard-format configuration to interact with the target network device.
- one embodiment of the present invention can allow system administrators to use the same standard configuration format across multiple brands and models of network devices. Thus, in networks that employ multiple brands and models of network devices, system administrators can be presented with similar configuration formats for each device despite the fact that the native configuration formats for the different devices are significantly different.
- the process for actually converting a native-format configuration for a network device into a standard-format configuration is generally a multi-step process.
- one embodiment of the present invention initially determines the target network device's characteristics such as manufacturer, model, operating system version, etc.
- an appropriate configuration schema can be retrieved from a schema storage device.
- the schema can include a standard representation of the command structure for a particular type of network device.
- one schema could contain a representation of the command structure for all model 7500 CiscoTM routers using OS version 12.1, and another schema could contain a representation of the command structure routers using OS version 12.2.
- the schema, its creation, and its use are fully described in commonly owned and assigned U.S. patent application no. , Attorney Docket No.
- this schema can be directly used to generate an XML document that represents the configuration of the particular network device.
- an intermediate representation e.g., a hash representation
- the intermediate representation is used to more quickly generate the corresponding XML document.
- the number of instruction cycles needed to generate the XML document is reduced significantly when compared to generating the XML document directly.
- one embodiment of the present invention generates an XML representation of each native-format command in the network device's configuration by associating each command with the schema, or its hash representation.
- the XML document itself can be used to represent the standard- format configuration, or alternatively, the XML document can be converted into a DOM, and the DOM can represent the standard-format configuration. Notably, the integrity of the generated DOM can be verified via the schema that was used to generate the XML document, thereby providing a "closed-loop" capability.
- FIGURE 1 is a block diagram of a conventional network
- FIGURE 2 is a block diagram of a conventional router
- FIGURE 3 is a block diagram of one embodiment of a system constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention
- FIGURE 4 is a block diagram of an alternate embodiment of a system constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
- FIGURE 5 is a block diagram of one implementation of the DOM generator shown in FIGURE 3;
- FIGURE 6 is a flowchart of one method for operating the DOM generator shown in FIGURE 5; and FIGURE 7 is a flowchart of one method for generating an intermediate representation described with relation to FIGURE 6.
- FIGURE 1 illustrates a block diagram of a conventional network system 100.
- end-users 105 are connected to servers 110, which are connected to networking equipment such as hubs, not shown, optical components 115, and routers 120.
- networking equipment such as hubs, not shown, optical components 115, and routers 120.
- end-users 105 that are associated with different servers 110 can exchange data.
- the routers 120 and/or optical components 115 of the network system 100 may need reconfiguring.
- a system administrator 125— with the proper authorization-could access the router 120 and/or optical component 115 by, for example, establishing a telnet connection to the component and transferring configuration instructions thereto.
- FIGURE 2 it is a block diagram of one type of conventional router.
- a processor 125 is connected to a configuration interface 130, an operating system (OS) storage module 135, a command storage module 140, a configuration storage module 145, and a routing module 150.
- OS operating system
- the illustrated arrangement of these components is logical and not meant to be an actual hardware diagram. Thus, the components can be combined or further separated in an actual implementation. Moreover, the construction of each individual component is well- known to those of skill in the art.
- a system administrator 125 wishes to reconfigure a router 120, he accesses the router 120 through the configuration interface 130 and retrieves the present configuration for the router 120 from the configuration storage module 145. If necessary, the system administrator 125 can review available configuration commands and associated bounds by accessing and reviewing the commands stored in the command storage module 140. In essence, the command storage module 140 provides the knowledge base for a "help" screen. The commands stored in the command storage module 140 are often unique to the particular OS version stored in the OS module 135.
- FIGURE 3 it is a block diagram of one embodiment of a system constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
- a DOM generator 160 which is more fully described with relation to FIGURE 5, is connected to a network device 165, a schema storage device 170, a system administrator 175, a DOM storage device 180, and various DOM applications 185, which will be discussed in more detail below.
- the system administrator 175 initially notifies the DOM generator 160 to model the configuration for the network device 165.
- the DOM generator 160 is instructed to convert the active command format for the network device 165 into an XML and/or DOM format.
- the DOM generator 160 either polls the network device 165 to discover the device's characteristics, e.g., manufacturer, model, operating system version, etc., or retrieves the information from a database (not shown).
- the DOM generator 160 identifies and retrieves, from the schema storage device 170, the schema corresponding to the device characteristics for the network device 165.
- the DOM generator 160 then retrieves the configuration from the network device 165 and, using the retrieved schema, converts the individual commands of the configuration into a DOM.
- the resulting DOM can then be stored in the DOM storage device 180 in association with an identifier for the network device 165. Note that storage devices 170 and 180 could, in fact, be integrated into a single device.
- DOM format provides a standard format for most network device configurations.
- applications that use or manipulate network device configurations must be customized for each manufacturer, each model, and each OS version. This type of customization often requires many different versions of the same application.
- By converting each network device's configuration into a DOM format however, applications can be designed to utilize a single, standard configuration format and thereby limit the need for customizations.
- GUI DOM-based graphical user interface
- the hashed schema and/or the resulting DOM instance are used to drive the GUI used by the system administrator 175.
- the advantage of such a GUI 190 is that the system administrator 175 is presented with network device configurations in a standard, consistent format regardless of the characteristics of the particular network device.
- Another application that utilizes the DOM is the XML-XML converter 195, also called the standard XML-to-native XML converter. As previously described, some network devices include XML-based interfaces.
- these XML-based interfaces are generally based on proprietary (native) configuration instructions.
- the system administrator 175 may interface with one XML-based network device in a very different way than another XML-based network device.
- the XML-XML converter converts a standard XML-based instruction into a native XML-based instruction.
- the XML-XML converter allows the system administrator 175 to use the same XML-based command format for most network devices even though each device may require its own native XML-based command format.
- the XML-CLI converter 200 allows the system administrator 175 to interface with CLI-based network devices using a standard XML-based command format instead of a CLI-based command format.
- Other DOM- based applications may include lightweight directory access protocol (LDAP) for storing and manipulating schema, hash representations, and device configuration commands. These converters convert XML-based configurations into a LDAP-based configuration and LDAP-based configurations into XML-based configurations.
- LDAP lightweight directory access protocol
- These converters convert XML-based configurations into a LDAP-based configuration and LDAP-based configurations into XML-based configurations.
- Yet another possible DOM application is the comparator 210, which is configurable to identify the differences between two DOMs. For example, if the configuration for a target network device were changed, the new configuration could be retrieved from the device and converted to a DOM.
- the comparator 210 could then compare the new DOM against the original DOM to thereby identify any changes, additions, and/or deletions.
- the comparator can then record these changes in a markup DOM using a configuration change markup language and make the markup DOM available to the system administrator for configuration and validation purposes.
- the old DOM is compared against a draft DOM instead of a new DOM.
- the system administrator 175 generates a draft configuration for a target network device 165. This draft configuration is converted into a DOM, and the comparator 210 compares it against the target network device's original DOM.
- the system administrator 175 can use this embodiment of the comparator to view the configuration changes before the draft DOM is finalized and pushed to the target network device 165.
- the DOM applications can also include an (API) application programming interface 215.
- API application programming interface 215.
- This API provides a mechanism whereby the DOM can be transferred to/from other software programs, which may reside on network devices. Accordingly, the DOM can be programmatically modified outside of the embodiment and resubmitted.
- FIGURE 4 it is a block diagram of an alternate embodiment of a system 220 constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
- the DOM generator 160 is connected through a network 225 to the network devices 165, the system administrator 175, the schema storage device 170, and the DOM applications 180.
- This embodiment illustrates that the components described herein can be distributed in a number of ways and without impacting the basic operation of this system as described with regard to FIGURE 3.
- the DOM generator 160 includes a schema hash system 230, an XML converter 235, and a DOM transformer 250. These components can be connected to the schema storage device 170, the target network device 165, a DOM storage device 245 and an XML storage device 250.
- the XML converter 235 uses the appropriate schema, generates an XML document containing an XML representation of the network device's configuration. This XML document is then passed to the DOM transformer 240, which converts the XML document into a DOM.
- the output from the XML converter 235 and/or the DOM transformer 240 can be stored and passed to relevant software applications. For example, the output from the XML converter 235 can be stored in the XML storage device 250 and the output from the DOM transformer 240 can be stored in the DOM storage device 245.
- the XML converter 235 of this embodiment can convert the native configuration of the network device 165 into an XML document using an intermediate representation of the schema associated with the network device 165, such as a hash table generated by the hash system 230, instead of the schema itself.
- an intermediate representation of the appropriate schema the XML converter 235 can reduce the time and processing requirements needed to convert a native configuration into a corresponding XML document. The creation and use of the intermediate representation is described more fully with regard to FIGURE 6.
- the DOM generator 160 determines the target network device's characteristics by polling the network device or accessing a database (not shown) containing such information (step 255).
- the XML converter 235 identifies the appropriate intermediate representation for the target network device 165 (step 260). As previously described, this intermediate representation provides the necessary data to convert the native-format configuration of the target network device 165 into a standard format such as an XML format. Possibly concurrently with the XML converter 235 identifying the corresponding intermediate representation, the XML converter 235 retrieves the configuration from the network device 165 and identifies each initial command within each configuration line (steps 265 and 270).
- the XML converter 235 could locate command distinguishing tags embedded in the configuration such as "begin command” and/or "end command.” Alternatively, the XML converter 235 could use logical indicators within the configuration to distinguish the individual commands. Either way, using the identified initial command, the XML converter 235 generates a look-up key that is used to index the hash table, locate a hash map object that corresponds to the look-up key and retrieve that hash map object (steps 275 and 280). The hash map object contains schema information regarding the command or value such as whether optional or required data type, etc. Finally, using this hash map object, the XML converter 235 can assemble the XML-based command and write it to the corresponding XML document (step 295).
- this process should be repeated for each command in the network device's native-format configuration.
- this process is represented by determining whether any more commands need to be converted (step 300). If so, branch 305 is followed to step 270 and a next native-format command is identified. The process for this command is then repeated. If, on the other hand, all native-format commands have been converted, branch 310 is followed and the XML converter 235 assembles all of the generated XML commands into an XML document that can be stored in the XML storage device and/or provided to the DOM transformer 240 (step 315).
- the DOM transformer 240 can verify its transformation process against the appropriate schema stored in the schema storage device 170 (step 325).
- each configuration command in the DOM should have a particular format, which are defined by the configuration schema corresponding to the target network device 165.
- the DOM transformer 240 can compare the generated DOM against the corresponding configuration schema to verify that the DOM was properly constructed.
- a command is initially retrieved from the previously assembled configuration schema (step 328). Additionally, any related higher-level commands (called parent commands) in the configuration schema can be retrieved (step 330). The retrieved command and the retrieved parent commands can then be used to generate a unique hash key for the retrieved command (step 330).
- a corresponding hash object can also be generated.
- This hash object can include basic information related to the generated hash key.
- information such as data type, sibling commands, and application specific information is retrieved and assembled into the schema object (steps 335 and 340).
- the data type information can indicate whether the data associated with a particular command is a string, an integer, etc. and the sibling information can identify commands at the same hierarchical level as the initially retrieved command that have the same parent command as the initially retrieved command.
- specialized application information can also be retrieved (step 345). This application information, for example, can define special processing requirements for a schema.
- the corresponding schema object can be assembled and the hash map assembled for the unique key and schema object (step 350 and 355). If there are any more commands in the schema that need to be modeled, branch 362 is followed and the next command can be retrieved (step 328). If all of the commands have been modeled, then branch 364 can be followed and the various hash objects can be stored as a completed hash table (step 365).
Abstract
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US09/942,833 | 2001-08-29 | ||
US09/942,833 US7200548B2 (en) | 2001-08-29 | 2001-08-29 | System and method for modeling a network device's configuration |
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Also Published As
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US7200548B2 (en) | 2007-04-03 |
US20070150561A1 (en) | 2007-06-28 |
US20030046370A1 (en) | 2003-03-06 |
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