Part of the index for this table. An arbitrary
integer used only for indexing purposes. Generally
monotonically increasing from 1 as new applications are
started on the host, it uniquely identifies application
invocations.
The numbering for this index increases by 1 for each
INVOCATION of an application, regardless of which
installed application package this entry represents a
running instance of.
An example of the indexing for a couple of entries is
shown below.
:
sysApplRunStarted.17.14
sysApplRunStarted.17.63
sysApplRunStarted.18.13
:
In this example, the agent has observed 12 application
invocations when the application represented by entry 18
in the sysApplInstallPkgTable is invoked. The next
invocation detected by the agent is an invocation of
installed application package 17. Some time later,
installed application 17 is invoked a second time.
NOTE: this index is not intended to reflect a real-time
(wall clock time) ordering of application invocations;
it is merely intended to uniquely identify running
instances of applications. Although the
sysApplInstallPkgIndex is included in the INDEX clause
for this table, it serves only to ease searching of
this table by installed application and does not
contribute to uniquely identifying table entries.
Parsed from file SYSAPPL-MIB.mib
Module: SYSAPPL-MIB
Part of the index for this table. An arbitrary
integer used only for indexing purposes. Generally
monotonically increasing from 1 as new applications are
started on the host, it uniquely identifies application
invocations.
The numbering for this index increases by 1 for each
INVOCATION of an application, regardless of which
installed application package this entry represents a
running instance of.
An example of the indexing for a couple of entries is
shown below.
:
sysApplRunStarted.17.14
sysApplRunStarted.17.63
sysApplRunStarted.18.13
:
In this example, the agent has observed 12 application
invocations when the application represented by entry 18
in the sysApplInstallPkgTable is invoked. The next
invocation detected by the agent is an invocation of
installed application package 17. Some time later,
installed application 17 is invoked a second time.
NOTE: this index is not intended to reflect a real-time
(wall clock time) ordering of application invocations;
it is merely intended to uniquely identify running
instances of applications. Although the
sysApplInstallPkgIndex is included in the INDEX clause
for this table, it serves only to ease searching of
this table by installed application and does not
contribute to uniquely identifying table entries.
sysApplRunIndex OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..
fffffffh)
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"Part of the index for this table. An arbitrary
integer used only for indexing purposes. Generally
monotonically increasing from 1 as new applications are
started on the host, it uniquely identifies application
invocations.
The numbering for this index increases by 1 for each
INVOCATION of an application, regardless of which
installed application package this entry represents a
running instance of.
An example of the indexing for a couple of entries is
shown below.
:
sysApplRunStarted.17.14
sysApplRunStarted.17.63
sysApplRunStarted.18.13
:
In this example, the agent has observed 12 application
invocations when the application represented by entry 18
in the sysApplInstallPkgTable is invoked. The next
invocation detected by the agent is an invocation of
installed application package 17. Some time later,
installed application 17 is invoked a second time.
NOTE: this index is not intended to reflect a real-time
(wall clock time) ordering of application invocations;
it is merely intended to uniquely identify running
instances of applications. Although the
sysApplInstallPkgIndex is included in the INDEX clause
for this table, it serves only to ease searching of
this table by installed application and does not
contribute to uniquely identifying table entries."
View at oid-info.com
Part of the index for this table. An arbitrary
integer used only for indexing purposes. Generally
monotonically increasing from 1 as new applications are
started on the host, it uniquely identifies application
invocations.
The numbering for this index increases by 1 for each
INVOCATION of an application, regardless of which
installed application package this entry represents a
running instance of.
An example of the indexing for a couple of entries is
shown below.
:
sysApplRunStarted.17.14
sysApplRunStarted.17.63
sysApplRunStarted.18.13
:
In this example, the agent has observed 12 application
invocations when the application represented by entry 18
in the sysApplInstallPkgTable is invoked. The next
invocation detected by the agent is an invocation of
installed application package 17. Some time later,
installed application 17 is invoked a second time.
NOTE: this index is not intended to reflect a real-time
(wall clock time) ordering of application invocations;
it is merely intended to uniquely identify running
instances of applications. Although the
sysApplInstallPkgIndex is included in the INDEX clause
for this table, it serves only to ease searching of
this table by installed application and does not
contribute to uniquely identifying table entries.
Parsed from file rfc2287-System-Applications.mib.txt
Company: None
Module: SYSAPPL-MIB
Part of the index for this table. An arbitrary
integer used only for indexing purposes. Generally
monotonically increasing from 1 as new applications are
started on the host, it uniquely identifies application
invocations.
The numbering for this index increases by 1 for each
INVOCATION of an application, regardless of which
installed application package this entry represents a
running instance of.
An example of the indexing for a couple of entries is
shown below.
:
sysApplRunStarted.17.14
sysApplRunStarted.17.63
sysApplRunStarted.18.13
:
In this example, the agent has observed 12 application
invocations when the application represented by entry 18
in the sysApplInstallPkgTable is invoked. The next
invocation detected by the agent is an invocation of
installed application package 17. Some time later,
installed application 17 is invoked a second time.
NOTE: this index is not intended to reflect a real-time
(wall clock time) ordering of application invocations;
it is merely intended to uniquely identify running
instances of applications. Although the
sysApplInstallPkgIndex is included in the INDEX clause
for this table, it serves only to ease searching of
this table by installed application and does not
contribute to uniquely identifying table entries.
sysApplRunIndex OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..'ffffffff'h) MAX-ACCESS not-accessible STATUS current DESCRIPTION "Part of the index for this table. An arbitrary integer used only for indexing purposes. Generally monotonically increasing from 1 as new applications are started on the host, it uniquely identifies application invocations. The numbering for this index increases by 1 for each INVOCATION of an application, regardless of which installed application package this entry represents a running instance of. An example of the indexing for a couple of entries is shown below. : sysApplRunStarted.17.14 sysApplRunStarted.17.63 sysApplRunStarted.18.13 : In this example, the agent has observed 12 application invocations when the application represented by entry 18 in the sysApplInstallPkgTable is invoked. The next invocation detected by the agent is an invocation of installed application package 17. Some time later, installed application 17 is invoked a second time. NOTE: this index is not intended to reflect a real-time (wall clock time) ordering of application invocations; it is merely intended to uniquely identify running instances of applications. Although the sysApplInstallPkgIndex is included in the INDEX clause for this table, it serves only to ease searching of this table by installed application and does not contribute to uniquely identifying table entries." ::= { sysApplRunEntry 1 }
sysApplRunIndex OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX Gauge(1..4294967295) ACCESS not-accessible STATUS mandatory DESCRIPTION "Part of the index for this table. An arbitrary integer used only for indexing purposes. Generally monotonically increasing from 1 as new applications are started on the host, it uniquely identifies application invocations. The numbering for this index increases by 1 for each INVOCATION of an application, regardless of which installed application package this entry represents a running instance of. An example of the indexing for a couple of entries is shown below. : sysApplRunStarted.17.14 sysApplRunStarted.17.63 sysApplRunStarted.18.13 : In this example, the agent has observed 12 application invocations when the application represented by entry 18 in the sysApplInstallPkgTable is invoked. The next invocation detected by the agent is an invocation of installed application package 17. Some time later, installed application 17 is invoked a second time. NOTE: this index is not intended to reflect a real-time (wall clock time) ordering of application invocations; it is merely intended to uniquely identify running instances of applications. Although the sysApplInstallPkgIndex is included in the INDEX clause for this table, it serves only to ease searching of this table by installed application and does not contribute to uniquely identifying table entries." ::= { sysApplRunEntry 1 }
Automatically extracted from Cisco "SNMP v2 MIBs".
sysApplRunIndex OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..'ffffffff'h) MAX-ACCESS not-accessible STATUS current DESCRIPTION "Part of the index for this table. An arbitrary integer used only for indexing purposes. Generally monotonically increasing from 1 as new applications are started on the host, it uniquely identifies application invocations. The numbering for this index increases by 1 for each INVOCATION of an application, regardless of which installed application package this entry represents a running instance of. An example of the indexing for a couple of entries is shown below. : sysApplRunStarted.17.14 sysApplRunStarted.17.63 sysApplRunStarted.18.13 : In this example, the agent has observed 12 application invocations when the application represented by entry 18 in the sysApplInstallPkgTable is invoked. The next invocation detected by the agent is an invocation of installed application package 17. Some time later, installed application 17 is invoked a second time. NOTE: this index is not intended to reflect a real-time (wall clock time) ordering of application invocations; it is merely intended to uniquely identify running instances of applications. Although the sysApplInstallPkgIndex is included in the INDEX clause for this table, it serves only to ease searching of this table by installed application and does not contribute to uniquely identifying table entries." ::= { sysApplRunEntry 1 }
sysApplRunIndex OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX Unsigned32 (1..'ffffffff'h) MAX-ACCESS not-accessible STATUS current DESCRIPTION "Part of the index for this table. An arbitrary integer used only for indexing purposes. Generally monotonically increasing from 1 as new applications are started on the host, it uniquely identifies application invocations. The numbering for this index increases by 1 for each INVOCATION of an application, regardless of which installed application package this entry represents a running instance of. An example of the indexing for a couple of entries is shown below. : sysApplRunStarted.17.14 sysApplRunStarted.17.63 sysApplRunStarted.18.13 : In this example, the agent has observed 12 application invocations when the application represented by entry 18 in the sysApplInstallPkgTable is invoked. The next invocation detected by the agent is an invocation of installed application package 17. Some time later, installed application 17 is invoked a second time. NOTE: this index is not intended to reflect a real-time (wall clock time) ordering of application invocations; it is merely intended to uniquely identify running instances of applications. Although the sysApplInstallPkgIndex is included in the INDEX clause for this table, it serves only to ease searching of this table by installed application and does not contribute to uniquely identifying table entries." ::= { sysApplRunEntry 1 }
Internet Assigned Numbers Authority
OID | Name | Sub children | Sub Nodes Total | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.3.6.1.2.1.54.1.2.1.1.2 | sysApplRunStarted | 0 | 0 | The date and time that the application was started. |
1.3.6.1.2.1.54.1.2.1.1.3 | sysApplRunCurrentState | 0 | 0 | The current state of the running application instance. The possible values are running(1), runnable(2) but waiting for a resource… |