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EXPERIMENTAL
Network Working Group                                      R. HedbergRequest for Comments: 2654                                  CatalogixCategory: Experimental                                  B. Greenblatt                       Directory Tools and Application Services, Inc.                                                             R. Moats                                                                 AT&T                                                              M. Wahl                                         Innosoft International, Inc.                                                          August 1999A Tagged Index Object for use in the Common Indexing ProtocolStatus of this Memo   This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.   Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.   Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This document defines a mechanism by which information servers can   exchange indices of information from their databases by making use of   the Common Indexing Protocol (CIP).  This document defines the   structure of the index information being exchanged, as well as the   appropriate meanings for the headers that are defined in the Common   Indexing Protocol.  It is assumed that the structures defined here   can be used by X.500 DSAs, LDAP servers, Whois++ servers, CSO Ph   servers and many others.Table of Contents1. Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22. Background  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33. Object  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44. The Tagged Index Object . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54.1. The Agreement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54.2. Content Type  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .84.3 Tagged Index BNF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94.3.1. Header Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .104.3.2. Tokenization types  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .114.3.3. Tag Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .114.4. Incremental Indexing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12Hedberg, et al.               Experimental                      [Page 1]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 19995. Examples  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .135.1 The original database  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .135.1.1 "complete" consistency based full update . . . . . . . . . .145.1.2 "tag" consistency based full update  . . . . . . . . . . . .145.1.3 "unique" consistency based full update . . . . . . . . . . .155.2 First update . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .165.2.1 "complete" consistency based incremental update  . . . . . .165.2.2 "tag" consistency based incremental update   . . . . . . . .175.2.3 "unique" consistency based incremental update  . . . . . . .175.3 Second update  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .185.3.1 "complete" consistency based incremental update  . . . . . .185.3.2 "tag" consistency based incremental update . . . . . . . . .195.3.3 "unique" consistency based incremental update  . . . . . . .206. Aggregation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .216.1 Aggregation of Tagged Index Objects  . . . . . . . . . . . . .217. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .218. References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .229. Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23   Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .241. Introduction   The Common Indexing Protocol (CIP) as defined in [1] proposes a   mechanism for distributing searches across several instances of a   single type of search engine to create a global directory.  CIP   provides a scalable, flexible scheme to tie individual databases into   distributed data warehouses that can scale gracefully with the growth   of the Internet.  CIP provides a mechanism for meeting these goals   that is independent of the access method that is used to access the   data that underlies the indices.  Separate from CIP is the definition   of the Index Object that is used to contain the information that is   exchanged among Index Servers.  One such Index Object that has   already been defined is the Centroid that is derived from the Whois++   protocol [2].   The Centroid does not meet all the requirements for the exchange of   index information amongst information servers.  For example, it does   not support the notion of incremental updates natively.  For   information servers that contain millions of records in their   database, constant exchange of complete dredges of the database is   bandwidth intensive.  The Tagged Index Object is specifically   designed to support the exchange of index update information.  This   design comes at the cost of an increase in the size of the index   object being exchanged.  The Centroid is also not tailored to always   be able to give boolean answers to queries.  In the Centroid Model,   "an index server will take a query in standard Whois++ format, search   its collections of centroids and other forward information, determine   which servers hold records which may fill that query, and thenHedberg, et al.               Experimental                      [Page 2]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   notifies the user's client of the next servers to contact to submit   the query." [2] Thus, the exchange of Centroids amongst index servers   allows hints to be given about which information server actually   contains the information.  The Tagged Index Object labels the various   pieces of information with identifiers that tie the individual object   attributes back to an object as a whole.  This "tagging" of   information allows an index server to be more capable of directing a   specific query to the appropriate information server.  Again, this   feature is added to the Tagged Index Object at the expense of an   increase in the size of the index object.2. Background   The Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) is defined in [3],   and it defines a mechanism for accessing a collection of information   arranged hierarchically in such a way as to provide a globally   distributed database which is normally called the Directory   Information Tree (DIT).  Some distinguishing characteristics of LDAP   servers are that normally, several servers cooperate to manage a   common subtree of the DIT.  LDAP servers are expected to respond to   requests that pertain to portions of the DIT for which they have   data, as well as for those portions for which they have no   information in their database. For example, the LDAP server for a   portion of the DIT in the United States (c=US) must be able to   provide a response to a Search operation that pertains to a portion   of the DIT in Sweden (c=se).  Normally, the response given will be a   referral to another LDAP server that is expected to be more   knowledgeable about the appropriate subtree.  However, there is no   mechanism that currently enables these LDAP servers to refer the LDAP   client to the supposedly more knowledgeable server.  Typically, an   LDAP (v3) server is configured with the name of exactly one other   LDAP server to which all LDAP clients are referred when their   requests fall outside the subtree of the DIT for which that LDAP   server has knowledge.  This specification defines a mechanism whereby   LDAP server can exchange index information that will allow referrals   to point towards a clearly accurate destination.   The X.500 series of recommendations defines the Directory Information   Shadowing Protocol (DISP) [4] which allows X.500 DSAs to exchange   information in the DIT.  Shadowing allows various information from   various portions of the DIT to be replicated amongst participating   DSAs.  The design point of DISP is improved at the exchange of entire   portions of the DIT, whereas the design point of CIP and the Tagged   Index Object is optimized at the exchange of structural index   information about the DIT, and improving the performance of tree   navigation amongst various information servers.  The Tagged Index   Object is more appropriate for the exchange of index information than   is DISP.  DISP is more targeted at DIT distribution and faultHedberg, et al.               Experimental                      [Page 3]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   tolerance.  DISP is thus more appropriate for the exchange of the   data in order to spread the load amongst several information servers.   DISP is tailored specifically to X.500 (and other hierarchical   directory systems), while the Tagged Index Object and CIP can be used   in a wide variety of information server environments.   While DISP allows an individual directory server to collect   information about large parts of the DIT, it would require a huge   database to collect all the replicas for a significant portion of the   DIT.  Furthermore, as X.525 states: "Before shadowing can occur, an   agreement, covering the conditions under which shadowing may occur is   required.  Although such agreements may be established in a variety   of ways, such as policy statements covering all DSAs within a given   DMD ...", where a DMD is a Directory Management Domain.  This is   owing to the case that the data in the DIT is being exchanged amongst   DSA rather than only the information required to maintain an Index.   In many environments such an agreement is not appropriate, and to   collect information for a meaningful portion of the DIT, many   agreements may need to be arranged.3. Object   What is desired is to have an information server (or network of   information servers) that can quickly respond to real world requests,   like:   -    What is Tim Howes's email address?  This is much harder than;        What email address does Tim Howes at Netscape have ?   -    What is the X.509 certificate for Fred Smith at compuserve.com?        One certainly doesn't want to search CompuServe's entire        directory tree to find out this one piece of information.  I        also don't want to have to shadow the entire CompuServe        directory subtree onto my server.  If this request is being made        because Fred is trying to log into my server, I'd certainly want        to be able to respond to the BIND in real time.   -    Who are all the people at Novell that have a title of        programmer?   all these requests can reasonably be translated into LDAP or Whois++,   and other directory access protocol queries.  They can also be   serviced in a straightforward way by the users home information   server if it has the appropriate reference information into the   database that contains the source data.  Here, the first server would   be able to "chain" the request for the user.  Alternatively, a   precise referral could be returned.  If the home information server   wants to service (i.e chain) the request based on the indexHedberg, et al.               Experimental                      [Page 4]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   information that it has on hand, this servicing could be done several   different means:      -    issuing LDAP operations to the remote directory server      -    issuing DSP operations to the remote directory server      -    issuing DAP operations to the remote directory server      -    issuing Whois++ operations to the remote Whois++ server      -     ...4. The Tagged Index Object   This section defines a Tagged Index Object that can be exchanged by   Information Servers using CIP.  While often it is acceptable for   Information Servers to make use of the Centroid definition (from [2])   to exchange index information, the goals in defining a new construct   are multi-pronged:   -    When the Information Server receives a search request that        warrants that a referral be returned, allow the server to return        a referral that will point client to a server that is most        likely able to answer the request correctly.  False positive        referrals (the search turns up hits in the index object that        generate referrals to servers that don't hold the desired        information) can be reduced, depending on the choice of        attribute tokenization types that are used.   -    Potentially allow incremental updates that will then consume        substantially less bandwidth then if full updates always had to        be used.4.1. The Agreement   Before a Tagged Index Object can be exchanged, the organization that   administers the object supplier and the organization that administers   the object consumer must reach an agreement on how the servers will   communicate. This agreement contains the following:   -    "index-type": This specification describes the index type "x-        tagged-index-1"   -    "dsi": An OID that uniquely identifies the subtree and scope.        This field is not explicitly necessary, as it may not provide        information beyond what is contained in the "base-uri" below.Hedberg, et al.               Experimental                      [Page 5]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   -    "base-uri": One or more URI's that will form the base of any        referrals created based on the index object that is governed by        this agreement.  For example, in the LDAP URL format [8] the        base-uri would specify (among other items): the LDAP host,  the        base object to which this index object refers (e.g. c=SE), and        the scope of the index object (e.g. single container).   -    "supplier": The hostname and listening portnumber of the        supplier server, as well as any alternative servers holding that        same naming contexts, if the supplier is unavailable.   -    "consumeraddr": This is a URI of the "mailto:" form, with theRFC 822 email address of the consumer server.  Further versions        of this draft allow other forms of URI, so that the consumer may        retrieve the update via the WWW, FTP or CIP.   -    "updateinterval": The maximum duration in seconds between        occurances of the supplier server generating an update.  If the        consumer server has not received an update from the supplier        server after waiting this long since the previous update, it is        likely that the index information is now out of date.  A typical        value for a server with frequent updates would be 604800        seconds, or every week.  Servers whose DITs are only  modified        annually could have a much longer update interval.   -    "attributeNamespace": Every set of index servers that together        wants to support a specific usage of indeces, has to agree on        which attributenames to use in the index objects. The        participating directory servers also has to agree on the mapping        from local attributenames to the attributenames used in the        index. Since one specific index server might be involved in        several such sets, it has to have some way to connect a update        to the proper set of indexes. One possible solution to this        would be to use different DSIs.   -    "consistencybase": How consistency of the index is maintained        over incremental updates:            "complete" - every change or delete concerning one object            has to contain all tokens connected to that object. This            method must be supported by any server who wants to comply            with this standard.            "tag" - starting at a full update every incremental update            refering back to this full updated has to maintain state-            information regarding tags, such that a object within the            original database is assigned the same tagnumber every time.            This method is optional.Hedberg, et al.               Experimental                      [Page 6]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999            "unique" - every object in the Dataset has to have a unique            value for a specific attribute in the index. A example of            such a attribute could be the distinguishedName attribute.            This method is also optional.   -    "securityoption": Whether and how the supplier server should        sign and encrypt the update before sending it to the consumer        server.  Options for this version of the specification are:            "none" - the update is sent in plaintext            "PGP/MIME": the update is digitally signed and encrypted            using PGP [9]            "S/MIME": the update is digitally signed and encrypted using            S/MIME [10]            "SSLv3": the update is digitally signed and encrypted using            an SSLv3 connection [11]            "Fortezza": the update is digitally signed and encrypted            using Fortezza [5]   It is recommended that the "PGP/MIME" option be used when exchanging   sensitive information across public networks, and both the supplier   and consumer have PGP keys. The "Fortezza" option is intended for use   in environments where security protocols are based on Fortezza-   compatible devices. The "S/MIME" option can be used with both the   supplier and consumer have RSA keys and can make use of the PKCS   protocols defined in the S/MIME specification. The "SSLv3" option can   be used when both the supplier and consumer have access to SSL   services, have server certificates, and can mutually authenticate   each other.   -    Security Credentials: The long-term cryptographic credentials        used for key exchange and authentication of the consumer and        supplier servers, if a security option was selected.  For        "PGP/MIME," this will be the trusted public keys of both        servers.  For "Fortezza," this will be the certificate paths of        both servers to a common point of trust. For "S/MIME" and        "SSLv3" these will be the certificates of the supplier and        consumer.Hedberg, et al.               Experimental                      [Page 7]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999        Note that if the index server maintains the information that        would appear in the agreement in a directory according to the        definitions in [7], then no real formal agreement between the        two parties needs to be put in place, and the information that        is required for communication between the two index servers is        derived automatically from the directory.4.2. Content Type   The update consists of a MIME object of type application/cip-index-   object.  The parameters are:      "type": this has value "application/index.obj.tagged".      "dsi": the DSI (if any) from the agreement.      "base-uri". A set of URIs, separated by spaces. In each URI, the      hostname/portno must be distinct, and based on the "supplier" part      of the agreement.   The payload is mostly textual data but may include bytes with the   high bit set.  The originating information server should set the   content-transfer-encoding as appropriate for the information included   in the payload.   This object may be encapsulated in a wrapper content (such as   multipart/signed) or be encrypted as part of the security procedures.   The resulting content can the distributed, for example via electronic   mail.  For example,   From: supplier@sup.com Date: Thu, 16 Jan 1997 13:50:37 -0500   Message-Id: <199701161850.NAA29295@sup.com>;   To: consumer@consumer.com       <<-- from consumer server address   Reply-to: supplier-admin@sup.com   MIME-Version: 1.0   Content-Type: application/index.obj.tagged;   dsi=1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.85.85.1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.9.10.11.12.13.14.15.16;   base-uri="ldap://sup.com/dc=sup,dc=com ldap://alt.com/dc=sup,dc=com"   The payload is series of CRLF-terminated lines. The payload is UTF-8.   Some supplier servers may only be able to generate the printable US-   ASCII subset of UTF-8, but all consumer servers must be able to   handle the full range of Unicode characters when decoding the   attribute values (in the "attr-value" field in the BNF below).Hedberg, et al.               Experimental                      [Page 8]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 19994.3.  Tagged Index BNF   The Tagged Index object has the following grammar, expressed in   modified BNF format:   index-object = 0*(io-part SEP) io-part   io-part      = header SEP schema-spec SEP index-info   header       = version-spec SEP update-type SEP this-update SEP                   last-update context-size name-space SEP   version-spec = "version:" *SPACE "x-tagged-index-1"   update-type  = "updatetype:" *SPACE ( "total" |                  ( "incremental" [*SPACE "tagbased"|"uniqueIDbased" ] )   this-update  = "thisupdate:" *SPACE TIMESTAMP   last-update  = [ "lastupdate:" *SPACE TIMESTAMP SEP]   context-size = [ "contextsize:" *SPACE 1*DIGIT SEP]   schema-spec  = "BEGIN IO-Schema" SEP 1*(schema-line SEP)                  "END IO-Schema"   schema-line  = attribute-name ":" token-type   token-type   = "FULL" | "TOKEN" | "RFC822" | "UUCP" | "DNS"   index-info   = full-index | incremental-index   full-index   = "BEGIN Index-Info" SEP 1*(index-block SEP)                  "END Index-Info"   incremental-index = 1*(add-block | delete-block | update-block)   add-block    = "BEGIN Add Block" SEP 1*(index-block SEP)                  "END Add Block"   delete-block = "BEGIN Delete Block" SEP 1*(index-block SEP)                  "END Delete Block"   update-block = "BEGIN Update Block" SEP                  0*(old-index-block SEP)                  1*(new-index-block SEP)                  "END Update Block"   old-index-block = "BEGIN Old" SEP 1*(index-block SEP)                  "END Old"   new-index-block = "BEGIN New" SEP 1*(index-block SEP)                  "END New"   index-block  = first-line 0*(SEP cont-line)   first-line   = attr-name ":" *SPACE taglist "/" attr-value   cont-line    = "-" taglist "/" attr-value   taglist      = tag 0*("," tag) | "*"   tag          = 1*DIGIT ["-" 1*DIGIT]   attr-value   = 1*(UTF8)   attr-name    = 1*(NAMECHAR)   TIMESTAMP    = 1*DIGIT   NAMECHAR     = DIGIT | UPPER | LOWER | "-" | ";" | "."   SPACE        = <ASCII space, %x20>;   SEP          = (CR LF) | LF   CR           = <ASCII CR, carriage return, %x0D>;   LF           = <ASCII LF, line feed, %x0A>;Hedberg, et al.               Experimental                      [Page 9]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   DIGIT        = "0" | "1" | "2" | "3" | "4" | "5" | "6" | "7" |                  "8" | "9"   UPPER        = "A" | "B" | "C" | "D" | "E" | "F" | "G" | "H" |                  "I" | "J" | "K" | "L" | "M" | "N" | "O" | "P" |                  "Q" | "R" | "S" | "T" | "U" | "V" | "W" | "X" |                  "Y" | "Z"   LOWER        = "a" | "b" | "c" | "d" | "e" | "f" | "g" | "h" |                  "i" | "j" | "k" | "l" | "m" | "n" | "o" | "p" |                  "q" | "r" | "s" | "t" | "u" | "v" | "w" | "x" |                  "y" | "z"   US-ASCII-SAFE  = %x01-09 / %x0B-0C / %x0E-7F                   ;; US-ASCII except CR, LF, NUL   UTF8           = US-ASCII-SAFE / UTF8-1 / UTF8-2 / UTF8-3                             / UTF8-4 / UTF8-5   UTF8-CONT      = %x80-BF   UTF8-1         = %xC0-DF UTF8-CONT   UTF8-2         = %xE0-EF 2UTF8-CONT   UTF8-3         = %xF0-F7 3UTF8-CONT   UTF8-4         = %xF8-FB 4UTF8-CONT   UTF8-5         = %xFC-FD 5UTF8-CONT   The set of characters allowed to appear in the attr-name field is   limited to the set of characters used in LDAP and WHOIS++ attribute   names.  For other services that have attribute name character sets   that are larger than these, those services should create a profile   that maps the names onto object identifiers, and the sequence of   digits and periods is used by those services in creating the attr-   name fields for their Tagged Index Objects.   It is worth mentioning that updates to a index based in tagged index   objects MUST be performed in the order specified by the tagged index   object itself.4.3.1.  Header Descriptions   The header section consists of one or more "header lines".  The   following header lines are defined:      "version": This line must always be present, and have the value      "x-tagged-index-1" for this version of the specification.      "updatetype": This line must always be present.  It takes as the      value either "total" or "incremental".  The first update sent by a      supplier server to a consumer server for a DSI must be a "total"      update.Hedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 10]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999      "thisupdate": This line must always be present. The value is the      number of seconds from 00:00:00 UTC January 1, 1970 at which the      supplier constructed this update.      "lastupdate": This line must be present if the "updatetype" list      has the value "incremental".  The value is the number of seconds      from 00:00:00 UTC January 1, 1970 at which the supplier      constructed the previous update sent to the consumer.  This field      allows the consumer to determine if a previous update was missed      "contextsize": This line may be present at the supplier's option.      The value is a number, which is the approximate total number of      entries in the subtree.  This information is provided for      statistical purposes only.4.3.2.  Tokenization Types   The Tagged Index Object inherits the "TOKEN" scheme for tokenization   as specified in [2].  In addition, there are several other   tokenization schemes defined for the Tagged Index Object.    The following table presents these schemes and what character(s) are   used to delimit tokens.        Token Type      Tokenization Characters        FULL    none        TOKEN   white space, "@"RFC822  white space, ".", "@"        UUCP    white space, "!"        DNS     any character note a number, letter, or "-"4.3.3.  Tag Conventions   In the tag list, multiple consecutive tags may be shortened by using   "#-#".  For example, the list "3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10" may be shortened to   "3-10".  Tags are to be applied to the data on a per entry level.   Thus, if two index lines in the same index object contain the same   tag, then those two lines always refer to the same "record" in the   directory.  In LDAP terminology, the two lines would refer to the   same directory object.  Additionally if two index lines in the same   index object contain different tags, then it is always the case that   those two lines refer back to different records in the directory. The   meaning of '*' in the tag position is that that specific token apears   in every record in the directory.   The tag applied to the same underlying record in two separate   transmissions of a full-index may be different.  Thus, receiving   index servers should make no assumptions about the values of the tags   across index object boundaries.Hedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 11]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 19994.4. Incremental Indexing   The tagged index object format supports the ability of information   servers to distribute only delta index data, rather than distributing   total index information each time.  This scenario, known as   incremental indexing supports three basic types of operations: add,   delete and replace.  If the incremental updatetype is specified in   the tagged index object, then the index object contains a snapshot of   only the changes that have been made since the index object specified   in the lastupdate header was distributed.  If the receiving index   server did not receive that index object, it should request a total   index object.  If the CIP protocol supports it, the index server may   request the specific index object that it missed.   If the tagged index object contains an Add Block, then the lines in   the Add Block refer to new records that were added to the information   base of the transmitting index server.  It can be guaranteed that   those records did not exist in any previously received tagged index   object, and the receiving index server can insert this index   information in the index that it already maintains for the   transmitting index server.   If the tagged index object contains a Delete Block, then the   structure of the Delete Block depends on how the consistency is   maintained;   -  "completeRecord": all the tokens connected to the record to be      deleted has to be included, the tag used to connect tokens in this      message has no relation to tags used in previously sent tagged      index objects.   -  "uniqueIDBased": only the unique identifier has to be defined.   -  "tagBased": all the tokens connected to the record has to be      included but then preceded by the tag used for this specific      record in the preceding set of the last full update and the there      on following incremental updates.   If the tagged index object contains an Update Block, then the lines   in the Update Block refer to records that were changed in the   information base of the transmitting index server. Again the specific   content of the block depends on how the consistency is maintained.   -  "completeRecord": All the tokens representing the old version of      the record as well as the new ones has to be included.   -  "uniqueIDBased": The unique ID has to be included together with      the tokens that have changed.Hedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 12]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   -  "tagBased": Only the changed tokens are included, but then both      the old version, if there was one, as well as the new one, if      there is one.   The Update Block also supports the idea of indexing new attributes   that were not previously included in the tagged index object.  For   example, if the transmitting index server began including index   information on postal addresses, then it could include an Update   Block in the index object that included all the index information on   postal addresses for all records in its information base, and   indicate that nothing else has changed.5. Examples   In the following sections, for each different consistencybase type,   the tagged index object is represented for the following scenario;   The examples starts with one full update and following that a set of   updates. The underlying information is presented in the LDIF [6]   format.5.1 The original database   dn: cn=Barbara Jensen, ou=Product Development, o=Ace Industry, c=US   objectclass: top   objectclass: person   objectclass: organizationalPerson   cn: Barbara Jensen   cn: Barbara J Jensen   cn: Babs Jensen   sn: Jensen   uid: bjensen   dn: cn=Bjorn Jensen, ou=Accounting, o=Ace Industry, c=US   objectclass: top   objectclass: person   objectclass: organizationalPerson   cn: Bjorn Jensen   sn: Jensen   title: Accounting manager   dn: cn=Gern Jensen, ou=Product Testing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   objectclass: top   objectclass: person   objectclass: organizationalPerson   cn: Gern Jensen   cn: Gern O Jensen   sn: Jensen   title: testpilot   dn: cn=Horatio Jensen, ou=Product Testing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   objectclass: topHedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 13]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   objectclass: person   objectclass: organizationalPerson   cn: Horatio Jensen   cn: Horatio N Jensen   sn: Jensen   title: testpilot5.1.1 "Complete" consistency based full update   version: x-tagged-index-1   updatetype: total   thisupdate: 855938804   BEGIN IO-Schema   cn: TOKEN   sn: FULL   title: TOKEN   END IO-Schema   BEGIN Index-Info   cn: 1/Barbara   -1/J   -1/Babs   -*/Jensen   -2/Bjorn   -3/Gern   -3/O   -4/Horatio   -4/N   sn: */Jensen   title: 1/product   -1-2/manager   -1/accounting   -3,4/testpilot   END Index-Info5.1.2 "tag" consistency based full update   version: x-tagged-index-1   updatetype: total   thisupdate: 855938804   BEGIN IO-Schema   cn: TOKEN   sn: FULL   title: TOKEN   END IO-Schema   BEGIN Index-Info   cn: 1/Barbara   -1/J   -1/BabsHedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 14]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   -*/Jensen   -2/Bjorn   -3/Gern   -3/O   -4/Horatio   -4/N   sn: */Jensen   title: 1/product   -1-2/manager   -1/accounting   -3,4/testpilot   END Index-Info5.1.3 "unique" consistency based full update   version: x-tagged-index-1   updatetype: total   thisupdate: 855938804   BEGIN IO-Schema   dn: FULL   cn: TOKEN   sn: FULL   title: TOKEN   END IO-Schema   BEGIN Index-Info   dn: 1/cn=Barbara Jensen, ou=Product Development, o=Ace Industry, c=US   -2/cn=Bjorn Jensen, ou=Accounting, o=Ace Industry, c=US   -3/cn=Gern Jensen, ou=Product Testing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   -4/cn=Horatio Jensen, ou=Product Testing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   cn: 1/Barbara   -1/J   -1/Babs   -*/Jensen   -2/Bjorn   -3/Gern   -3/O   -4/Horatio   -4/N   sn: */Jensen   title: 1/product   -1-2/manager   -1/accounting   -3,4/testpilot   END Index-InfoHedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 15]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 19995.2 First update   Gern Jensen's entry above changes to:   dn: cn=Gern Jensen, ou=Product Testing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   objectclass: top   objectclass: person   objectclass: organizationalPerson   cn: Gern Jensen   cn: Gern O Jensen   sn: Jensen   title: chiefpilot5.2.1 First update using "complete"   version: x-tagged-index-1   updatetype: incremental   lastupdate: 855940000   thisupdate: 855938804   BEGIN IO-schema   cn: TOKEN   sn: FULL   title: FULL   END IO-Schema   BEGIN Update Block   BEGIN Old   cn: 1/Gern   cn: 1/O   cn: 1/Jensen   sn: 1/Jensen   title: 1/testpilot   END Old   BEGIN New   cn: 1/Gern   cn: 1/O   cn: 1/Jensen   sn: 1/Jensen   title: 1/chiefpilot   END New   END Update BlockHedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 16]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 19995.2.2 First update using "tag" consistency   version: x-tagged-index-1   updatetype: incremental   lastupdate: 855940000   thisupdate: 855938804   BEGIN IO-schema   cn: TOKEN   sn: FULL   title: FULL   END IO-Schema   BEGIN Update Block   BEGIN Old   title: 3/testpilot   END Old   BEGIN New   title: 3/chiefpilot   END New   END Update Block5.2.3 First update using "unique" ID's   version: x-tagged-index-1   updatetype: incremental   lastupdate: 855940000   thisupdate: 855938804   BEGIN IO-schema   cn: TOKEN   sn: FULL   title: FULL   END IO-Schema   BEGIN Update Block   BEGIN Old   dn: 1/cn=Gern Jensen, ou=Product Testing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   title: 1/testpilot   END Old   BEGIN New   dn: 1/cn=Gern Jensen, ou=Product Testing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   title: 1/chiefpilot   END New   END Update BlockHedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 17]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 19995.3 Second update   # Add a new entry   dn: cn=Bo Didley, ou=Marketing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   changetype: add   objectclass: top   objectclass: person   objectclass: organizationalPerson   cn: Bo Didley   sn: Didley   title: Policy Maker   # Delete an existing entry   dn: cn=Bjorn Jensen, ou=Accounting, o=Ace Industry, c=US   changetype: delete   # Modify all other entries: adding an additional locality value   dn: cn=Barbara Jensen, ou=Product Development, o=Ace Industry, c=US   changetype: modify   add: locality   locality: New Jersey   dn: cn=Gern Jensen, ou=Product Testing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   changetype: modify   add: locality   locality: New Orleans   dn: cn=Horatio Jensen, ou=Product Testing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   changetype: modify   add: locality   locality: New Caledonia5.3.1 "complete"   version: x-tagged-index-1   updatetype: incremental   lastupdate: 855938804   thisupdate: 855939525   BEGIN IO-schema   cn: TOKEN   sn: FULL   title: FULL   locality: TOKEN   END IO-Schema   BEGIN Add Block   cn: 1/Bo   -1/Didley   sn: 1/Didley   title: 1/Policy   -1/maker   locality: 1/New   -1/YorkHedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 18]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   END Add Block   BEGIN Delete Block   cn: 1/Bjorn   -1/Jensen   sn: 1/Jensen   title: 1/Accounting   -1/Manager   END Delete Block   BEGIN Update Block   BEGIN Old   cn: 1/Barbara   -1/J   -1-3/Jensen   -2/Gern   -2/O   -3/Horatio   sn: 1-3/Jensen   title: 1/Production   -1/Manager   -2/Testpilot   -3/Chiefpilot   END Old   BEGIN New   cn: 1/Barbara   -1/J   -1-3/Jensen   -2/Gern   -2/O   -3/Horatio   sn: 1-3/Jensen   title: 1/Production   -1/Manager   -2/Testpilot   -3/Chiefpilot   locality: 1/Jersey   -2/Orleans   -3/Caledonia   -1-3/New   END New    END Update Block5.3.2 "tag"   version: x-tagged-index-1   updatetype: incremental   lastupdate: 855938804   thisupdate: 855939525   BEGIN IO-schemaHedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 19]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   cn: TOKEN   sn: FULL   title: FULL   locality: TOKEN   END IO-Schema   BEGIN Add Block   cn: 5/Bo   -5/Didley   sn: 5/Didley   title: 5/Policy   -5/maker   locality: 5/New   -5/York   END Add Block   BEGIN Delete Block   cn: 2/Bjorn   -2/Jensen   sn: 2/Jensen   title: 2/Accounting   -2/Manager   END Delete Block   BEGIN Update Block   BEGIN New   locality: 1/Jersey   -2/Orleans   -4/Caledonia   -1,2,4/New   END New   END Update Block5.3.3 "unique"   version: x-tagged-index-1   updatetype: incremental   lastupdate: 855938804   thisupdate: 855939525   BEGIN IO-schema   cn: TOKEN   sn: FULL   title: FULL   locality: TOKEN   END IO-Schema   BEGIN Add Block   dn: 1/cn=Bo Didley, ou=Marketing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   cn: 1/Bo   -1/Didley   sn: 1/Didley   title: 1/PolicyHedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 20]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   -1/maker   locality: 1/New   -1/York   END Add Block   BEGIN Delete Block   dn: 1/cn=Bjorn Jensen, ou=Accounting, o=Ace Industry, c=US   END Delete Block   BEGIN Update Block   BEGIN New   dn: 1/cn=Barbara Jensen, ou=Product Development, o=Ace Industry, c=US   -2/cn=Gern Jensen, ou=Product Testing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   -3/cn=Horatio Jensen, ou=Product Testing, o=Ace Industry, c=US   locality: 1/Jersey   -2/Orleans   -3/Caledonia   -1-3/New   END New   END Update Block6. Aggregation6.1. Aggregation of Tagged Index Objects   Aggregation of two tagged index objects is done by merging the two   lists of values and rewriting each tag list.  The tag list rewriting   process is done so that the resulting index object appears as if it   came from a single source. An index server that aggregates tagged   index objects for export MUST ensure that the export URL (i.e. the   base-uri of the CIP object) for the aggregate index object will route   all queries that have "hits" on the index object to that server   (otherwise, query routing will not succeed).7. Security Considerations   This specification provides a protocol for transferring information   between two servers.  The information transferred may be protected by   laws in many countries, so care must be taken in the methods used to   tokenize the data to ensure that protected data may not be   reconstructed in full by the receiving server.  This protocol does   not have any inherent protection against spoofing or eavesdropping.   However, since this protocol is transported in MIME messages (as are   all CIP index objects), it inherits all the security capabilities and   liabilities of other MIME messages.  Specifically, those wanting to   prevent eavesdropping or spoofing may use some of the various   techniques for signing and encrypting MIME messages.   Information Server administrators must decide what portions of their   databases are appropriate for inclusion in the Tagged Index Object.Hedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 21]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   For distribution of information outside the enterprise, information   server developers are encouraged to allow for facilities that hide   the organizational structure when generating the Tagged Index Object   from the underlying information database.  To allow for the secure   transmission of Tagged Index Objects across the Internet, Index   Servers should make use of SSL when completing the connection. In   order to strongly verify the identity of the peer index server on the   other side of the connection, SSL version 3 certificate exchange   should be implemented, and the identity in the peer's certificate   verify with the Public Key Infrastructure.  If electronic mail is   used to exchange the Tagged Index Objects, then a secure messaging   facility, such as PGP/MIME or S/MIME should be used to sign or   encrypt (or both) the information.8. References   [1]  Allen, J. and M. Mealling, "The Architecture of the Common        Indexing Protocol (CIP),"RFC 2651, August 1999.   [2]  Weider, C., Fullton, J. and S. Spero, "Architecture of the        Whois++ Index Service",RFC 1913, February 1996.   [3]  Wahl, M., Howes, T. and S. Kille, "Lightweight Directory Access        Protocol (v3)",RFC 2251, December 1997.   [4]  ITU, "X.525 Information Technology - Open Systems        Interconnection - The Directory: Replication", November 1993.   [5]  "FORTEZZA Application Implementors  Guide for the FORTEZZA        Crypto Card (Production Version)", Document #PD4002102-1.01,        SPYRUS, 1995.   [6]  Good, G., "The LDAP Data Interchange Format (LDIF) - Technical        Specification", Work in Progress.   [7]  Hedberg, R., "LDAPv2 Client vs. the Index Mesh",RFC 2657,        August 1999.   [8]  Howes, T. and M. Smith, "The LDAP URL Format",RFC 2255,        December 1997.   [9]  Elkins, M., "MIME Security with Pretty Good Privacy (PGP)",RFC2015, October 1996.   [10] Ramsdell, B., Editor, "S/MIME Version 3 Message Specification",RFC 2633, June 1999.Hedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 22]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 1999   [11] Allen, C. and T. Dierks, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0",RFC2246, January 1999.9.  Authors' Addresses   Roland Hedberg   Catalogix   Dalsveien 53   0387 Oslo   Norway   EMail:  roland@catalogix.ac.se   Bruce Greenblatt   Directory Tools and Application Services, Inc.   6841 Heaton Moor Drive   San Jose, CA 95119   USA   Phone: +1-408-224-5349   EMail: bgreenblatt@directory-applications.com   Ryan Moats   AT&T   15621 Drexel Circle   Omaha, NE 68135-2358   USA   Phone:  +1 402 894-9456   EMail:  jayhawk@att.com   Mark Wahl   Innosoft International, Inc.   8911 Capital of Texas Hwy, Suite 4140   Austin, TX 78759   USA   Phone +1 626 919 3600   EMail  Mark.Wahl@innosoft.comHedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 23]

RFC 2654           Tagged Index Object for use in CIP        August 199910.  Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Hedberg, et al.               Experimental                     [Page 24]

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