Basic CMAP operations Sample Clauses

Basic CMAP operations. 4.6.5.1 Overview Generally, the CMAP protocol provides the application layer with the ability to perform the following operations on an agent residing on the server’s agent directory: • Create a new instance (of a given agent class) • Delete an instance • Get data properties of a given instance • Set data properties of a given instance • Activate a method of a given instance (with a set of given parameters) Each of these operations is basically composed of a request sent to the server side, and a corresponding asynchronous reply sent from the server back to the client. An additional important reply is the redirect reply, which is used by the server to refer requesting clients to other servers, or to another destination object. All request packets have the following common fields: • Each pdu starts with a Protocol identifier. This identifier should be the same as used by the Connect command (although it can use a sub-protocol of that major-version) • The Agent Instance Id which identifies the agent instance on which the operation should be performed. • The client Request Id which is used by the client to uniquely identify the outgoing request so it could handle multiple asynchronous requests on a single connection. • An optional Session Id which is used for synchronization purposes. It is created and supplied by the server side, through application specific means (By using the activate method command). The need for such an id arises in situations where multiple copies of the same agent instance can exist in different, replicated servers. This allows the client and server to make sure they are speaking about the same physical agent instance. The client should save the last session-id returned by the server, and return it to the server on future invocations. • A destination, which is the agent on which to operate, or to active the method of. The value of this parameter is carried on from previous command (on the same connection), so it need to be specified only once in a series of commands on the same object. Please note that the basic CMAP protocol is generic and doesn’t discuss any agent class specific definitions. Profiles of specific agent class definitions should define: • Which methods are used (and their corresponding parameters). • Which result codes are used. • Which attributes are used.
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