Alexandre Polozoff
TMN Legacy System Development

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Telecommunications Management Network

A 421 page hardcover with lots of info on recent trends including CORBA, Java and the web.


Telecommunications Network Management

No ideas about this book. Anyone read it yet?


TMN into the 21st Century
Techniques, Standards, Technologies & Applications

Featuring original chapters from prominent experts in the field.


Power Programming in HP Openview: Developing CMIP Management Applications


Programmer's, here you go!


Network Management Standards: SNMP, CMIP, TMN


One of the few books still in print on this subject.


SONET & T1


Learn about SONET & T1


ISDN SS7


Learn about ISDN and SS7 technology


Signaling in Telecommunications Networks


An informative book


Understanding SNMP MIBs


Don't know how to read an SNMP MIB? This book is for you.


Windows NT: SNMP


A 325 page guide.


HP Openview: A manager's guide


This 450 page book is chock full of info


How to Manage Your Network Using SNMP


A network management practicum

One of the more common requirements in today's networks is supporting legacy systems. Legacy systems are old, sometimes unsupported, pieces of network equipment that still need to be managed as part of the new paradigm.

Few existing network elements have built in CMIP agents. In fact, most of the legacy systems have either a:

  • proprietary application interface.

    This can be a problem if the application interface has no programming api. You may have to write some unix shell scripts.

  • SNMP interface.

    While not ideal it does provide the ability for the agent to proxy the SNMP information.

  • TL1 or some other interface.

    Again the agent will have to proxy this information.

  • unix shell commands! Yes, some elements are actually managed in this fashion.

The only way for corporations to reduce their network management costs is to bombard the network element vendors to start providing CMIP-based TMN agents. Some vendors are starting to provide CMIP agents for their network elements. Except these agents are only for some of their newer pieces of equipment.

Proxy CMIP agents (Q3 adapters or Mediation devices) can be written to provide the necessary functionality. Again you have to plan this into your project plan. This is a little trickier since the developer tasked with this requires knowledge of both the CMIP issues and the legacy system's interface. But a competent programmer should be able to write a proxy agent in about 3 months.


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Copyright @ 1995-1998 Alexandre Polozoff. All Rights Reserved.


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