Hi, I would like someone help me to understand some indexes I don't know where 
are from. All the entries in the usmUserTable have indexed the engineID in 
decimal format and the userName in decimal format too. For the users "Root" and 
"Supervisor" configured within an Ubuntu agent with engineID 
0x80001f88804fdfdc455ce79c52 I obtained the following entry doing a walk:
1.3.6.1.6.3.15.1.2.2.1.3.13.128.0.31.136.128.79.223.220.69.92.231.156.82.4.82.111.111.116
= 
Root1.3.6.1.6.3.15.1.2.2.1.3.13.128.0.31.136.128.79.223.220.69.92.231.156.82.10.83.117.112.101.114.118.105.115.111.114
= Supervisor
usmUserSecurityName                                                     
engineID                                                      userName     

What is that 13 before the engineID and that 4 and 10 before the userNames? 
Another example from the securityToGroupTable related to the users created, 
these are the results of the walk. This table indexes the securityModel (3 for 
both, because of usm snmpv3) and the securityName that is the same of the 
userName.
1.3.6.1.6.3.16.1.2.1.3.3.10.83.117.112.101.114.118.105.115.111.114
= grpSupervisor

1.3.6.1.6.3.16.1.2.1.3.3.4.82.111.111.116 =
grpRoot
vacmGroupName  securityModel   userName
Again, I don't understand where do the 10 and 4 come? 
Are this numbers something similar to the situation when someone wants to 
create a row in the ccCopyTable of a cisco router in order to send to a 
computer the running-config? In that case, I create a row with any arbitrary 
integer I want... Is that situation happening here? But, in that case, the 
index of the row I want to create will be inmediately after the OID, like in 
the vacmGroupName example (10 and 4) but in the usmUserSecurityName there are 2 
numbers in different places inside the same object and that doesn't make any 
sense to me.
I hope I made myself clear with the examples and what is my question. What do 
that numbers mean and where they come from? Thanks in advance....               
                            
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