mbed-os/targets/TARGET_ONSEMI/TARGET_NCS36510/mib.h

141 lines
5.7 KiB
C

/**
******************************************************************************
* @file mib.h
* @brief Defines the structure of a Management Information Base (MIB)
* @internal
* @author ON Semiconductor
* $Rev: 2284 $
* $Date: 2013-09-12 15:08:22 +0530 (Thu, 12 Sep 2013) $
******************************************************************************
* Copyright 2016 Semiconductor Components Industries LLC (d/b/a “ON Semiconductor”).
* All rights reserved. This software and/or documentation is licensed by ON Semiconductor
* under limited terms and conditions. The terms and conditions pertaining to the software
* and/or documentation are available at http://www.onsemi.com/site/pdf/ONSEMI_T&C.pdf
* (“ON Semiconductor Standard Terms and Conditions of Sale, Section 8 Software”) and
* if applicable the software license agreement. Do not use this software and/or
* documentation unless you have carefully read and you agree to the limited terms and
* conditions. By using this software and/or documentation, you agree to the limited
* terms and conditions.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS". NO WARRANTIES, WHETHER EXPRESS, IMPLIED
* OR STATUTORY, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE APPLY TO THIS SOFTWARE.
* ON SEMICONDUCTOR SHALL NOT, IN ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, BE LIABLE FOR SPECIAL,
* INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, FOR ANY REASON WHATSOEVER.
* @endinternal
*
* @details
* This file defines the structure, as seen from the outside, of any Management
* Information Base (MIB) implementation. It does not define the contents of the
* MIB.
*
* A MIB is implemented as a map of parameters, each identified by a unique Object ID.
* The contents of the map have to be filled in by the actual MIB implementation, by
* assigning to the GlobMibMap variable. The mib_param_t data type defines the format
* of each parameter in the map. *NOTE:* The length of the last entry in the map must
* be 0.
*
* One parameter must always be present in the MIB map: the system revision. It has
* to be set by assigning a value to the systemRevision variable.
*
* Parameters can be of any data type, and read / write or read only. To resemble
* the hierarchical structure of an SNMP MIB, each Object ID consists of four nibbles
* (uint16_t) where the more significant nibbles correspond to a higher level in the
* hierarchy.
*
* The contents of the map can be accessed with the fMibSetBytes() and fMibGetBytes()
* functions. The implementation of the MIB may also make its parameters accessible
* in a more "direct" way; that is left to the implementation. The fMibSetBytes() and
* fMibGetBytes() functions are made available to the user interface (see ui.h). In
* order to do so, fMibUiInit() must be called during device initialization.
*
* Additionally, for parameters that have an array as their value, the individual
* elements of the array can be accessed using the fMibIndexedSetBytes() and
* fMibIndexedGetBytes() functions. The functions are similar to their non-indexed
* variants (fMibSetBytes() and fMibGetBytes()), except that they expect the index of
* the element as an argument.
*
* fMibGetBytes() and fMibSetBytes() will normally copy bytes from the MIB parameter
* into a given place in memory, or from memory to the MIB parameter. This behaviour
* can be overruled by assigning a function to the setAction and / or getAction
* fields of the MIB parameter.
*
* For parameters that have an array as their value, the length field has a slightly
* different meaning: the most significant 16 bits contain the length of the array;
* the least significant 16 bits contain the width of the array (i.e. the size in
* bytes of the array's elements). This implies that the normal fMibGetBytes() and
* fMibSetBytes() cannot be used on these parameters; instead, a get and set action
* needs to be provided to interpret the length field in case of a non-indexed get
* or set.
*
* To access the MIB fields over the user interface, the module ID must be equal to
* MIB_MODULE_ID or 0x01. The data in the packet must have the following structure:
* <table>
* <tr>
* <th>Get (0x00) / Set (0x01) code</th>
* <th>Object ID</th>
* <th>Value (only for set)</th>
* </tr>
* <tr>
* <td>1 Byte</td>
* <td>2 Bytes</td>
* <td>X bytes</td>
* </tr>
* </table>
*
* <table>
* <tr>
* <th>Indexed Get (0x02) / Set (0x03) code</th>
* <th>Object ID</th>
* <th>Index</th>
* <th>Value (only for set)</th>
* </tr>
* <tr>
* <td>1 Byte</td>
* <td>2 Bytes</td>
* <td>2 Bytes</td>
* <td>X bytes</td>
* </tr>
* </table>
*
* The reply to this request will have the same structure, with the value always
* being present (in case of a Set as well as a Get request).
*
* In case an error occurs during a Set or Get request, an error is returned by
* fMibGetBytes(), fMibSetBytes() or the UI. See the UI Module's documentation for
* the format of an error reply. The applicable error codes are:
* <table>
* <tr><th>0x01</th><td>Trying to set a read-only parameter.</td></tr>
* <tr><th>0x02</th><td>Requested value out of range.</td></tr>
* <tr><th>0x03</th><td>Object ID is unknown.</td></tr>
* <tr><th>0x04</th><td>Provided index is incorrect.</td></tr>
* </table>
*
* @ingroup mib
*/
#ifndef MIB_H_
#define MIB_H_
#include <stdint.h>
#include "types.h"
#include "error.h"
/** A structure defining the format of the system revision parameter. */
typedef struct mib_systemRevision {
uint8_t hardwareRevision;
uint8_t patchLevel;
uint8_t bugFix;
uint8_t featureSet;
uint8_t generation;
uint8_t release;
} mib_systemRevision_t, *mib_systemRevision_pt;
/** The system revision. */
extern const mib_systemRevision_t systemRevision;
#endif /* MIB_H_ */