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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                        ESCC X.500/X.400 Task ForceRequest for Comments: 1330      ESnet Site Coordinating Committee (ESCC)                                         Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)                                                                May 1992Recommendations for the Phase I Deployment ofOSI Directory Services (X.500) andOSI Message Handling Services (X.400)                       within the ESnet CommunityStatus of this Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard.  Distribution of this memo is   unlimited.Overview   The Energy Sciences Network (ESnet) is a nation-wide computer data   communications network managed and funded by the United States   Department of Energy, Office of Energy Research (U.S. DOE/OER), for   the purpose of supporting multiple program, open scientific research.   ESnet is intended to facilitate remote access to major Energy   Research (ER) scientific facilities, provide needed information   dissemination among scientific collaborators throughout all ER   programs, and provide widespread access to existing ER supercomputer   facilities.   Coordination of ER-wide network-related technical activities over the   ESnet backbone is achieved through the ESnet Site Coordinating   Committee (ESCC). This committee is comprised of one technical   contact person from each backbone site, as well as some members of   the ESnet management and networking staff.  As the need for new   levels of ESnet services arise, the ESCC typically creates task   forces to investigate and research issues relating to these new   services.  Each task force usually results in a whitepaper which   makes recommendations to the ESnet community on how these services   should be deployed to meet the mission of DOE/OER.   This RFC is a near verbatim copy of the whitepaper produced by the   ESnet Site Coordinating Committee's X.500/X.400 Task Force.Table of Contents   Status of this Document  .......................................4   Acknowledgments  ...............................................4ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                     [Page 1]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 19921  Introduction  ...............................................51.1  Abstract and Introduction  ................................51.2  Structure of this Document  ...............................52  X.500 - OSI Directory Services  .............................62.1  Brief Tutorial  ...........................................62.2  Participation in the PSI White Pages Pilot Project  .......72.3  Recommended X.500 Implementation  .........................72.4  Naming Structure  .........................................82.4.1  Implications of the Adoption ofRFC-1255 by PSI  ........92.4.2  Universities and Commercial Entities  ...................102.4.3  Naming Structure Below the o=<site> Level  ..............102.5  Information Stored in X.500  ..............................132.5.1  Information Security  ...................................142.6  Accessing the X.500 Directory Service  ....................142.6.1  Directory Service via WHOIS  ............................152.6.2  Directory Service via Electronic Mail  ..................152.6.3  Directory Service via FINGER  ...........................152.6.4  Directory Service via Specialized Applications  .........152.6.5  Directory Service from PCs and MACs  ....................162.7  Services Provided by ESnet  ...............................162.7.1  X.500 Operations Mailing List  ..........................172.7.2  Accessing the X.500 Directory  ..........................172.7.3  Backbone Site Aliases  ..................................182.7.4  Multiprotocol Stack Support  ............................182.7.5  Managing a Site's X.500 Information  ....................192.7.5.1  Open Availability of Site Information  ................192.7.5.2  Access Methods for Local Users  .......................192.7.5.3  Limitations of Using ESnet Services  ..................202.8  ESnet Running a Level-0 DSA for c=US  .....................202.9  X.500 Registration Requirements  ..........................212.10  Future X.500 Issues to be Considered  ....................212.10.1  ADDMDS Interoperating with PRDMDS  .....................212.10.2  X.400 Interaction with X.500  ..........................212.10.3  Use of X.500 for NIC Information  ......................222.10.4  Use of X.500 for Non-White Pages Information  ..........222.10.5  Introduction of New X.500 Implementations  .............222.10.6  Interaction of X.500 and DECdns  .......................223  X.400 - OSI Message Handling Services  ......................233.1  Brief Tutorial  ...........................................233.2  ESnet X.400 Logical Backbone  .............................253.3  Naming Structure  .........................................253.3.1  Participating in the ESnet Private Management Domain  ...253.3.2  Operating a Site Private Management Domain  .............263.3.3  Detailed Name Structure  ................................263.4  X.400 Routing  ............................................263.4.1  Responsibilities in Operating an X.400 PRMD MTA  ........28   3.4.2  Responsibilities in Operating an X.400 Organizational MTA   293.5  Services Provided by ESnet  ...............................29ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                     [Page 2]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 19923.5.1  X.400 Operations Mailing List  ..........................303.5.2  MTA Routing Table on ESnet Information Server  ..........303.5.3  MTA Routing Table Format  ...............................303.5.4  Gateway Services and Multiprotocol Stack Support  .......30   3.5.5  Registering/Listing your PRMD or Organizational MTA with          ESnet  ..................................................313.6  X.400 Message Routing Between ADMDS and PRMDS  ............323.7  X.400 Registration Requirements  ..........................323.8  Future X.400 Issues to be Considered  .....................333.8.1  X.400 Mail Routing to International DOE Researchers  ....333.8.2  X.400 (1984) and X.400 (1988)  ..........................333.8.3  X.400 Interaction with X.500  ...........................334  OSI Name Registration and Issues  ...........................334.1  Registration Authorities  .................................344.2  Registration Versus Notification  .........................344.3  Sources of Nationally Unique Name Registration  ...........354.4  How to Apply for ANSI Organization Names  .................354.5  How to Apply for GSA Organization Names  ..................364.5.1  GSA Designated Agency Representatives  ..................364.5.2  Forwarding of ANSI Registrations to GSA  ................374.6  How to Apply for U.S. DOE Organization Names  .............374.7  Why Apply for a Trademark with the PTO?  ..................384.8  How to Apply for a Trademark with the PTO  ................384.9  Future Name Registration Issues to be Considered  .........394.9.1  ANSI Registered ADMD and PRMD Names  ....................39   Glossary  ......................................................40Appendix A:  Current Activities in X.500  ......................49Appendix B:  Current Activities in X.400  ......................55Appendix C:  How to Obtain QUIPU, PP and ISODE  ................58Appendix D:  Sample X.500 Input File and Restricted Character                List  .............................................65Appendix E:  ESnet Backbone Sites  .............................68Appendix F:  Local Site Contacts for DOE Naming Authorities  ...70Appendix G:  Recommended Reading  ..............................77Appendix H:  Task Force Member Information  ....................83   Security Considerations  .......................................86   Authors' Addresses  ............................................86ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                     [Page 3]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992               Recommendations for the Phase I Deployment of                    OSI Directory Services (X.500) and                   OSI Message Handling Services (X.400)                        within the ESnet Community         ESnet Site Coordinating Committee X.500/X.400 Task Force                                Version 1.1                                March 1992Status of this Document   This document makes recommendations for the Phase I deployment of OSI   Directory Services and OSI Message Handling Services within the ESnet   Community.  This document is available via anonymous FTP on the ESnet   Information Server (nic.es.net, 128.55.32.3) in the directory   [ANONYMOUS.ESNET-DOC] in the file ESNET-X500-X400-VERSION-1-1.TXT.   The distribution of this document is unlimited.Acknowledgments   The following individuals have participated in and contributed to the   ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force.  Several of these individuals have also   authored portions of this document.  SeeAppendix H for additional   information regarding task force members and contributing authors.   Allen Sturtevant (Chair)  Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory   Bob Aiken                 U.S. DOE/OER/SCS (now with NSF)   Joe Carlson               Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory   Les Cottrell              Stanford Linear Accelerator Center   Tim Doody                 Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory   Tony Genovese             Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory   Arlene Getchell           Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory   Charles Granieri          Stanford Linear Accelerator Center   Kipp Kippenhan            Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory   Connie Logg               Stanford Linear Accelerator Center   Glenn Michel              Los Alamos National Laboratory   Peter Mierswa             Digital Equipment Corporation   Jean-Noel Moyne           Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory   Kevin Oberman             Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory   Dave Oran                 Digital Equipment Corporation   Bob Segrest               Digital Equipment Corporation   Tim Streater              Stanford Linear Accelerator Center   Mike Sullenberger         Stanford Linear Accelerator Center   Alan Turner               Pacific Northwest Laboratory   Linda Winkler             Argonne National Laboratory   Russ Wright               Lawrence Berkeley LaboratoryESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                     [Page 4]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 19921.  Introduction1.1.  Abstract and Introduction   This document recommends an initial approach for the Phase I   deployment of OSI Directory Services (X.500) and OSI Message Handling   Services (X.400) within the ESnet community.  It is anticipated that   directly connected ESnet backbone sites will participate and follow   the suggestions set forth in this document.Section 7 of the "ESnet Program Plan" (DOE/OER-0486T, dated March   1991) cites the need for further research and investigation in the   areas of electronic mail and directory services.  The ESCC   X.500/X.400 Task Force was created to address this need.   Additionally, the task force is addressing the issues of a   coordinated, interoperable deployment of OSI Directory Services and   OSI Message Handling within the entire ESnet community.  Since only a   small subset of this community is actively pursuing these avenues,   considerable effort must be made to establish the necessary "base" to   build upon.  If directly connected ESnet sites participate in these   services, a consistent transition path will be ensured and the   services provided will be mutually valuable and useful.   X.500 and X.400 are continuously evolving standards, and are   typically updated every four years.  U.S. GOSIP (Government OSI   Profile) Requirements are updated to define additional functionality   as needed by the U.S. Federal Government, usually every two years.   As the X.500 and X.400 standards evolve and U.S. GOSIP Requirements   are extended, consideration must be given as to the effect this may   have on these existing services in the ESnet community.  At these   cross-roads, or when a sizeable increase in service functionality is   desired, another "phase of deployment" may be in order.  In this   sense, there isn't a specific "final phase" goal, but rather several   new releases (updates) to the level of existing services.1.2.  Structure of this Document   X.500 is presented first.  The issues of DSA (Directory Service   Agent) deployment, DSA registration, naming schema, involvement in   the PSI White Pages Pilot Project, recommended object classes,   recommended attribute types, information security, search   optimization, user friendly naming and update frequency are   addressed.   In the area of X.400, issues relating to MTA (Message Transfer Agent)   deployment, ESnet X.400 well-known entry points, ESnet backbone site   X.400 well-known entry points, MTA registration, naming hierarchy,   PRMD peering, bidirectional X.400-SMTP relaying andESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                     [Page 5]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   private/commercial X.400 routing are discussed.   Finally, the issues in name registration with ANSI (American National   Standards Institute), GSA (General Services Administration) and the   U.S. Department of Commerce, Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) are   discussed.2.  X.500 - OSI Directory Services2.1.  Brief Tutorial   X.500 is a CCITT/ISO standard which defines a global solution for the   distribution and retrieval of information (directory service).  The   X.500 standard includes the following characteristics:  decentralized   management, powerful searching capabilities, a single global   namespace, and a structured framework for the storage of information.   The 1988 version of the X.500 standard specifies four models to   define the Directory Service: the Information Model, the Functional   Model, the Organizational Model and the Security Model.  As is the   nature of International standards, work continues on the 1992 X.500   standard agreements.   The Information Model specifies how information is defined in the   directory.  The Directory holds information objects, which contain   information about "interesting" objects in the real-world.  These   objects are modeled as entries in an information base, the Directory   Information Base (DIB).  Each entry contains information about one   object:  ie, a person, a network, or an organization.  An entry is   constructed from a set of attributes each of which holds a single   piece of information about the object.  For example, to build an   entry for a person the attributes might include "surname",   "telephoneNumber", "postalAddress", "rfc822Mailbox" (SMTP mail   address), "mhsORAddresses" (X.400 mail address) and   "facsimileTelephoneNumber".  Each attribute has an attribute syntax   which describes the data that the attribute contains, for example, an   alphanumeric string or photo data.  The OSI Directory is extensible   in that it defines several common types of objects and attributes and   allows the definition of new ones as new applications are developed   that make use of the Directory.  Directory entries are arranged in a   hierarchical structure, the Directory Information Tree (DIT).  It is   this structure which is used to uniquely name entries.  The name of   an entry is its Distinguished Name (DN).  It is formed by taking the   DN of the parent's entry, and adding the the Relative Distinguished   Name (RDN) of the entry.  Along the path, the RDNs are collected,   each naming an arc in the path.  Therefore, a DN for an entry is   built by tracing the path from the root of the DIT to the entry.   The Functional Model defines how the information is stored in theESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                     [Page 6]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   directory, and how users access the information.  There are two   components of this model:  the Directory User Agent (DUA), an   application-process which interacts with the Directory on behalf of   the user, and the Directory System Agent (DSA), which holds a   particular subset of the Directory Information Tree and provides an   access point to the Directory for a DUA.   The Organizational Model of the OSI Directory describes the service   in terms of the policy defined between entities and the information   they hold.  The model defines how portions of the DIT map onto DSAs.   A Directory Management Domain (DMD) consists of one or more DSAs,   which collectively hold and manage a portion of the DIT.   The Security Model defines two types of security for Directory data:   Simple Authentication (using passwords) and Strong Authentication   (using cryptographic keys).  Authentication techniques are invoked   when a user or process attempts a Directory operation through a DUA.2.2.  Participation in the PSI White Pages Pilot Project   The PSI White Pages Pilot Project is currently the most well-   established X.500 pilot project within the United States.  For the   country=US portion of the DIT, PSI currently has over 80 organization   names registered.  Of these, several are ESnet-related.   The PSI White Pages Pilot Project is also connected to the Pilot   International Directory Service, PARADISE.  This pilot project   interconnects X.500 Directory Services between Australia, Austria,   Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland,   Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, Netherlands, New Zealand,   Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom and   Yugoslavia.  The combined totals for all of these countries   (including the United States) as of December 1991 are:                       DSAs:                     301                       Organizations:          2,132                       White Pages Entries:  581,104   Considering the large degree of national, and international,   connectivity within the PSI White Pages Pilot Project, it is   recommended that directly connected ESnet backbone sites join this   pilot project.2.3.  Recommended X.500 Implementation   Interoperability testing has not been performed on most X.500   implementations.  Further, some X.500 functions are not mature   standards and are often added by implementors as noninteroperableESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                     [Page 7]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   extensions.   To ensure interoperability for the entire ESnet community, the   University College London's publicly available X.500 implementation   (QUIPU) is recommended.  This product is known to run on several   UNIX-derivative platforms, operates over CLNS andRFC-1006 (withRFC-1006 being the currently recommended stack), and is currently in   wide-spread use around the United States and Europe, including   several ESnet backbone sites.Appendix C contains information on how to obtain QUIPU.   A later phase deployment of X.500 services within the ESnet community   will recommend products (either commercial or public domain) which   pass conformance and interoperability tests.2.4.  Naming Structure   As participants in the PSI White Pages Pilot Project, ESnet backbone   sites will align with the naming structure used by the Pilot.  This   structure is based upon a naming scheme for the US portion of the DIT   developed by the North American Directory Forum (NADF) and documented   inRFC-1255.  Using this scheme, an organization with national   standing would be listed directly under the US node in the global   DIT.  Organizations chartered by the U.S. Congress as well as   organizations who have alphanumeric nameforms registered with ANSI   are said to have national standing.  Therefore, a backbone site which   is a national laboratory would be listed under country=US:              @c=US@o=Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory   As would a site with an ANSI-registered organization name:           @c=US@o=National Energy Research Supercomputer Center   A university would be listed below the state in which it is located:                @c=US@st=Florida@o=Florida State University   And a commercial entity would be listed under the city or state in   which it is doing business, or "Doing Business As", depending upon   where its DBA is registered:                   @c=US@st=California@o=General Atomics                                   (or)             @c=US@st=California@l=San Diego@o=General Atomics   A list of the current ESnet backbone sites, and their locations, isESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                     [Page 8]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   provided inAppendix E.   Directly connected ESnet backbone sites will be responsible for   administering objects which reside below their respective portions of   the DIT.  Essentially, they must provide their own "Name Registration   Authority".  Although this may appear as an arduous task, it is   nothing more than the establishment of a procedure for naming, which   ensures that duplicate entries do not occur at the same level within   a sub-tree of the DIT.  For example, the Name Registration Authority   for MIT could create an Organizational Unit named "Computer Science".   This would appear in the DIT as:             @c=US@st=Massachusetts@o=MIT@ou=Computer Science   Similarly, all other names created under the   "@c=US@st=Massachusetts@o=MIT" portion of the DIT would be   administered by the same MIT Name Registration Authority.  This   ensures that every Organizational Unit under   "@c=US@st=Massachusetts@o=MIT" is unique.  By default, each ESnet   Site Coordinator is assumed to be the Name Registration Official for   their respective site.  If an ESnet Site Coordinator does not wish to   act in this capacity, they may designate another individual, at their   site, as the Name Registration Official.2.4.1.  Implications of the Adoption ofRFC-1255 by PSI   The North American Directory Forum (NADF) is comprised of commercial   vendors positioning themselves to offer commercial X.500 Directory   Services.  The NADF has produced several documents since its   formation.  The ones of notable interest are those which define the   structure and naming rules for the commercially operated DIT under   country=US.  Specifically, for an Organization to exist directly   under c=US, it must be an organization with national-standing.  From   pages 12-13 ofRFC-1255, national-standing is defined in the   following way:      "An organization is said to have national-standing if it is      chartered (created and named) by the U.S. Congress.  An example      of such an organization might be a national laboratory.  There      is no other entity which is empowered by government to confer      national-standing on organizations.  However, ANSI maintains an      alphanumeric nameform registration of organizations, and this      will be used as the public directory service basis for      conferring national-standing on private organizations."   Thus, it appears that National Laboratories (e.g. LBL, LLNL) are   considered organizations with national-standing.  However, those   ESnet backbone sites which are not National Laboratories may wish toESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                     [Page 9]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   register with ANSI to have their organization list directly under   c=US, but only if this is what they desire.  It is important to note   that NADF is not a registration authority, but a group of service   providers defining a set of rules for information sharing and mutual   interoperability in a commercial environment.   For further information on registering with ANSI, GSA or the U.S.   Patent and Trademark office, refer toSection 4 of this document.   For more information on PSI, refer toAppendix A.2.4.2.  Universities and Commercial Entities   Several of the ESnet backbone sites are not National Laboratories   (e.g. CIT, FSU, GA, ISU, MIT, NYU, UCLA and UTA).  Typically, at   these sites, a small collection of researchers are involved in   performing DOE/OER funded research.  Thus, this set of researchers at   a given site may not adequately represent the total X.500 community   at their facility. Additionally, ESnet Site Coordinators at these   facilities may not be authorized to act as the Name Registration   Official for their site.  So the question is, how do these sites   participate in the recommended Phase I deployment of ESnet X.500   services.  There are two possible solutions for this dilemma:   1.  If the site is not currently operating an X.500 DSA, the ESnet       Site Coordinator may be able to establish and administer a       DSA to master the DOE/OER portion of the site's local DIT,       e.g. "@c=US@st=<st>@o=<site>@ou=Physics".  Before attempting       this action, it would be prudent for the Site Coordinator to       notify or seek approval from some responsible entity.  At such       time that the site wishes to manage its own organization       within the X.500 DIT, the ESnet Site Coordinator would have to       make arrangements to put option 2 into effect.   2.  If the site is currently operating an X.500 DSA, the ESnet       Site Coordinator may be able to work out an agreement with the       current DSA administrator to administer a portion of the       site's local DIT which would represent the DOE/OER community       at that site.  For example, if the site were already       administering the organization "@c=US@st=       Massachusetts@o=Massachusetts Institute of Technology", the       ESnet Site Coordinator might then be able to administer the       organizational unit "@c=US@st=Massachusetts@o=Massachusetts       Institute of Technology@ ou=Physics".2.4.3.  Naming Structure Below the o=<site> Level   The structure of the subtree below the organization's node in the DIT   is a matter for the local organization to decide.  A site's DSAESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 10]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   manager will probably want to enlist input from others within the   organization before deciding how to structure the local DIT.   Some organizations currently participating in the Pilot have   established a simple structure, choosing to limit the number of   organizational units and levels of hierarchy.  Often this is done in   order to optimize search performance.  This approach has the added   benefit of insulating the local DIT from administrative restructuring   within the organization.  Others have chosen to closely model their   organization's departmental structure.  Often this approach seems   more natural and can enhance the information obtained from browsing   the Directory.   Below are experiences from current DSA managers, describing the way   they structured their local DIT and the reasons for doing so.  A site   may find this information helpful in determining how to structure   their local DIT.  Ultimately this decision will depend upon the needs   of the local organization and expectations of Directory usage.   Valdis Kletnieks of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute:      "For Virginia Tech, it turned out to be a reasonably      straightforward process.  Basically, the University is      organized on a College/Department basis.  We decided to model      that "real" structure in the DIT for two major reasons:      "(a) It duplicates the way we do business, so interfacing the      X.500 directory with the "real world" is easier.      "(b) With 600+ departmental units and 11,000+ people (to be      30,000+ once we add students), a "zero" (everybody at top) or      "one" deep (600 departments at top) arrangement just didn't      hack it - it was deemed necessary that you be able to do a      some 120 or 140 county office entries under the Extension      service, it's a BIT unwieldy there).  However, with some 20      college-level entries at the top, and the "average" college      having 30 departments, and the "average" department being from      10 to 40 people, it works out pretty well."   Jeff Tannehill of Duke University:      "Our DIT is flat.  We get the entire database of people at Duke      from Tel-Com and just put everyone directly under "O=Duke      University".      "Actually, there is an exception, when the DSA was first set up      and we had not received a database yet, I configured the DIT to      include "OU=Computer Science", under which myself and one otherESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 11]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992      System Administrator have entries.  Upon getting the database      for everyone else I decided not to attempt to separate the      people in the database into multiple ou's."   Joe Carlson of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory:      "We tried both flat (actually all under the same OU) and      splitting based on internal department name and ended up with      flat.  Our primary reason was load and search times, which were      2-3 times faster for flat organization."   Paul Mauvais of Portland State University:      "We originally set up our DIT by simply loading our campus      phone book into one level down from the top (e.g. OU=Faculty      and Staff, OU=Students, OU=Computing Services).      "I'd love to have an easy way to convert our flat faculty and      staff area into departments and colleges, but the time to      convert the data into the separate OU's is probably more than I      have right now."   Mohamed Ellozy of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute:      "Here we have a phone database that includes department, so we      got the ou's with no effort.  We thus never went the flat space      way."   Dan Moline of TRW:      "Well - we're still in the process of defining our DIT.  TRW      comes under the international companies DBA.  Our part under      the PSI White Pages Pilot defines the DIT for our space and      defense organization here in Redondo Beach (however, I      organized the structure to adhere to TRW corporate).  We input      from our manpower DB for our S&D personnel.  We're trying to      get corporate's DB for possible input.      "However, arranging your DIT by organizations (at least for      corps) presents a problem; things are always being reorganized!      We were DSO now we're SSO!!!  We still have some of our old      domain name for DNS tied to organizations that have not existed      for years!      "So we are currently redesigning our DIT to try to fit NADF 175      (something more geographically).  Our reasoning was that      organizations may change but buildings and localities do not."ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 12]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Ruth Lang of SRI:      "There has been no SRI-wide policy or decision to participate      in the PSI White Pages Pilot.  @c=US@O=SRI International      supports the information for one OU only (i.e., a local policy      and decision).  In order to not give the false impression that      all SRI information was contained under this O=SRI      International, I used OU=Network Information Systems Center.      If I were to structure the DIT for all of SRI, I'm sure that my      thinking would yield a much different structure."   Russ Wright of Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory:      "Since we don't have much organizational information in current      staff database, I have to stick to a fairly flat structure.  I      have two OUs.  One is for permanent staff, the other is for      guests (there is a flag in our database that is set for      guests).      "I may add an additional level of OUs to our current structure.      The top level would contain different 'types' of information.      For example, one OU may be 'Personnel', another may be called      publications).  Staff and Guests would reside under the      Personnel OU."   Peter Yee of NASA Ames:      "I broke up my DIT at the NASA Center level.  NASA is made of      nearly 20 Centers and Facilities.  The decision to break up at      this level was driven by several factors:      "1.  Control of the local portion of the DIT should reside with      the Center in question, particularly since the Center probably      supplies the data in question and controls the matching DSA.      "2.  Each Center ranges in size from 1,000 to 16,000 persons.      This seems to be the range that works well on moderate sized      UNIX servers.  Smaller would be a waste, larger would require      too much memory.      "3.  Representatives from several Centers have contacted me      asking if they could run their own DSAs so that they can      experiment with X.500.  Thus the relevant DSA needs to be under      their control."2.5.  Information Stored in X.500   The Phase I deployment of X.500 should be limited to "white pages"-ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 13]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   type information about people.  Other types of objects can be added   in later Phases, or added dynamically as the need arises.   To make X.500 truly useful to the ESnet community as a White Pages   service, it is recommended that the following minimum information   should be stored in the X.500 database:   Information   ASN.1 Attribute Type      Example   -----------   --------------------      -------   Locator Info  commonName                Allen Sturtevant                 surname                   Sturtevant                 postalAddress             LLNL                                           P.O. Box 5509, L-561                                           Livermore, CA 94551                 telephoneNumber           +1 510 422 8266                 facsimileTelephoneNumber  +1 510 422 0435   E-Mail Info   rfc822Mailbox             Sturtevant@es.net                 mhsORAddresses            /PN=Allen Sturtevant/O=NERSC/                                             /PRMD=ESnet/ADMD= /C=US/                 otherMailbox              DECnet:  ESNIC::APS   The above list of attributes comprises a minimum set which is   recommended for a person's entry.  However, you may chose to omit   some attributes for reasons of privacy or legality.  Note that the   X.500 standard requires that the surname and commonName attributes be   present.  If an individual's phone number and/or address cannot be   provided, they should be replaced by the site's "Information Phone   Number" and postal address to allow some means of contacting the   person.2.5.1.  Information Security   It is understood that placing this type of information in X.500 is   equivalent to putting the "Company Phone Book" on-line in the   Internet.  Different sites may treat this information differently.   Some may view it as confidential, while others may view this data as   open to the public.  In any case, it was recommended that ESnet sites   discuss the implications with their respective legal departments   before actually making their information openly available. There   currently exists minimal access control in several X.500   implementations.2.6.  Accessing the X.500 Directory Service   The PSI White Pages Pilot Project software provides numerous   interfaces to the information in the X.500 Directory.  Non-   interactive access mechanisms (e.g. WHOIS, FINGER and ElectronicESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 14]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Mail) make use of capabilities or services which already reside on   many workstations and hosts.  Such hosts could immediately take   advantage of the X.500 service with no additional software or   reconfiguration needed.  However, since these methods are non-   interactive, they only provide a way to search for and read   information in the Directory but no way to modify information.2.6.1.  Directory Service via WHOIS   The Pilot Project software allows you to configure the X.500   Directory service to be made available via a network port offering an   emulation of the SRI-NIC WHOIS service.  UNIX-based hosts and VMS   hosts running Multinet typically come configured with the WHOIS   service.  Users at their workstations would then be able to issue a   simple WHOIS command to a known host running a DSA to retrieve   information about colleagues at their site or at other ESnet sites.   For example, the command:      whois -h wp.lbl.gov wright   will return information about Russ Wright at Lawrence Berkeley Lab.   It is recommended that all sites which bring up such a service,   should provide an alias name for the host running their DSA of the   form <wp.site.domain> for consistency within the ESnet community.2.6.2.  Directory Service via Electronic Mail   The Pilot Project software also allows the X.500 Directory service to   be made available via electronic mail.  A user who sends an   electronic mail message to a known host running a DSA containing a   WHOIS-like command on the subject line, would then receive a return   mail message containing the results of their query.2.6.3.  Directory Service via FINGER   The X.500 Directory service could also be made available via the   FINGER service.  Although this access method does not come with the   PSI Pilot Project software, several sites have already implemented a   FINGER interface to the X.500 Directory.  For ease of use and   consistency, a single FINGER interface should be selected, then   individual implementations within the ESnet community should conform   to this interface.2.6.4.  Directory Service via Specialized Applications   Many X.500 Directory User Agents (DUAs) are widely available.  Some   of these come with the PSI Pilot Project software.  Other DUAs, which   have been developed by third parties to fit into the pilot software,ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 15]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   are publicly available.  These user agents support interactive access   to the X.500 Directory allowing browsing, searching, listing and   modifying data in the Directory.  However, in most cases, use of   these DUAs requires the Pilot Project software be installed on the   host system.  Only a few of these DUAs and their capabilities are   described below.   o  DISH - A User Agent which provides a textual interface to the      X.500 Directory.  It gives full access to all elements of the      Directory Access Protocol (DAP) and as such may be complex for      novice users.  DISH is most useful to the DSA administrator.   o  FRED - A User Agent which has been optimized for "white pages"      types of queries.  The FRED program is meant to be similar to      the WHOIS network service.  FRED supports reading, searching,      and modifying information in the X.500 Directory.   o  POD - An X-windows based User Agent intended for novice users.      POD relies heavily on the concept of the user "navigating"      around the DIT.  Pod supports reading and searching.  There are      no facilities to add entries or to modify the RDNs of entries,      though most other entry modifications are allowed.2.6.5.  Directory Service from PCs and MACs   Smaller workstations and personal computers lack the computing power   or necessary software to implement a full OSI protocol stack.  As a   consequence, several "light-weight" protocols have been developed   whereby the DAP runs on a capable workstation and exports a simpler   interface to other end-systems.  One such "light weight" protocol,   the Directory Assistance Service (DAS), is incorporated in the PSI   Pilot Project software.  Another "light weight" protocol, DIXIE, was   developed at the University of Michigan.  Publicly available User   Agents for both the MAC and PC have been developed using the DA-   service and the DIXIE protocol.  So long as you have the Pilot   Project software running on one host, you can provide these User   Agents on many end-systems without having to install the Pilot   software on all those end-systems.   For further information about available Directory User Agents, seeRFC-1292, "Catalog of Available X.500 Implementations".2.7.  Services Provided by ESnet   Currently, there are several ESnet backbone sites which are operating   their own DSAs within the PSI White Pages Pilot Project.  It is   anticipated that directly connected ESnet backbone sites will   eventually install and operate their own X.500 DSAs.  In the interim,ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 16]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   ESnet will provide complete support for ESnet backbone sites which   presently do not have the time, expertise or equipment to establish   X.500 services.  The mechanism for doing this is described inSection2.7.5 below.  Additionally, ESnet will provide a variety of services   in support of the entire X.500 community.  These are also described   in the following sections.2.7.1.  X.500 Operations Mailing List   ESnet maintains a mailing list for the discussion of relevant X.500   topics. This mailing list provides a means for sharing information,   experiences, and expertise about X.500 in the ESnet community.  New   sites joining the ESnet X.500 community will be announced on the   mailing list.  New DSA administrators will be able to solicit help   from more experienced administrators.  When a site brings up a new   X.500 DSA, the DSA manager should notify the ESnet DSA manager so as   to ensure they are promptly added to the mailing list.      General discussion:  x500-ops@es.net      To subscribe:        x500-ops-request@es.net2.7.2.  Accessing the X.500 Directory   ESnet has made the X.500 service openly available to the entire ESnet   community via each of the access methods described inSection 2.6   above.  Host WP.ES.NET provides TELNET access, FINGER and WHOIS   emulations, querying via electronic mail, as well as remote access   via light-weight protocols.  By making these services widely   available, we hope to acquaint more users with the features and   capabilities of X.500.   To try out some of the X.500 User Agents, simply TELNET to WP.ES.NET   and login as user "fred"; no password is required.  You have the   choice of running the Fred or Pod User Agents.  Fred provides a   command line interface while Pod provides an X-windows based   interface.  You can browse through the global X.500 DIT, search for   persons in various organizations, and even modify your own entry if   you have one.   Host WP.ES.NET also provides access to the X.500 Directory via   emulations of the FINGER and WHOIS utilities.  These interfaces   support a user-friendly-naming (UFN) scheme that simplifies the   syntax necessary to search for persons in other organizations.  The   following WHOIS command lines illustrate searching for persons at   various ESnet sites, utilizing the UFN syntax (similar FINGER command   lines could also be constructed):ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 17]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992      whois -h wp.es.net leighton,nersc      whois -h wp.es.net servey,doe      whois -h wp.es.net logg,slac      whois -h wp.es.net "russ wright",lbl   For further information about User Friendly Naming, see Steve   Hardcastle-Kille's working document titled, "Using the OSI Directory   to Achieve User Friendly Naming".2.7.3.  Backbone Site Aliases   As ESnet backbone sites join the X.500 pilot, their organizations'   entries will be placed in various parts of the DIT.  For example,   National Laboratories will be placed directly under the c=US portion   of the DIT, while universities and commercial entities will most   likely be placed under localities, such as states or cities.   In order to facilitate searching for the ESnet community as a whole,   ESnet backbone sites will also be listed as organizational units   under the node "@c=US@o=Energy Sciences Network".  These entries will   actually be aliases which point to the site's "real" organizational   entry.  Therefore, ESnet backbone sites will be listed in two   different places in the DIT and one could search for them in either   location.2.7.4.  Multiprotocol Stack Support   OSI applications currently run over many different transport/network   protocols, a factor which hinders communication between OSI end   nodes.  In order to facilitate communication, the ISODE may be   configured at compile time to support any combination of the   following stacks:RFC-1006 over TCP/IP      TP0      over X.25      TP0      over X.25 (84)      TP0      over the TP0-bridge      TP4      over CLNP   Within the ESnet community, the stacks of interest areRFC-1006 over   TCP/IP, TP4 over CLNP, and TP0 over X.25.  If a backbone site's DSA   is not running over all three of these stacks, it may eventually   receive referrals to a DSA that it can not connect to directly, so   the operation can not proceed.  Since the ESnet DSAs will be   configured to operate over all of the "stacks of interest," they can   serve as relay DSAs between site DSAs that do not have direct   connectivity.  The site's DSA manager will need to contact the ESnet   DSA manager to arrange for this relaying to occur.  Backbone sitesESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 18]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   will be encouraged to eventually provide as many of the three stacks   of interest as possible.2.7.5.  Managing a Site's X.500 Information   For sites which do not initially wish to operate their own DSA,   ESnet's DSA will master their site's portion of the DIT, enabling the   site to join the PSI Pilot Project and the ESnet X.500 community.  In   order to accomplish this, the site must provide the ESnet DSA manager   with information about the people to be included in the X.500   Directory.  This information can usually be obtained from your Site's   Personnel Database.   ESnet will only maintain a limited amount of information on behalf of   each person to be represented in the Directory.  The attribute types   listed in the table inSection 2.5 show the maximum amount of   information which the ESnet DSA will support for a person's entry in   the Directory. This set of attribute types is a small subset of the   attribute types offered by the PSI Pilot Project software.   Therefore, if a site wishes to include additional attribute types,   they should consider installing and operating their own DSA.   The format of the information to be provided to the ESnet DSA manager   is as follows:  the data should be contained in a flat, ASCII text   file, one record (line) per person, with a specified delimiter   separating the fields of the record.  More detailed information and a   sample of a site-supplied data file can be found inAppendix D.2.7.5.1.  Open Availability of Site Information   Although the PSI Pilot Project allows you to control who may access   Directory objects and their attributes, any information you provide   about persons at your site to be stored in the ESnet DSA will be   considered world readable.  This policy is necessary in order to   minimize the administrative cost of managing potentially many   organizational objects within the ESnet DSA.  If your site decides   that it does not wish to have certain information about its employees   publicly known (e.g. work telephone number) then you should not   provide this information to the ESnet DSA manager or you should   consider installing and administering your own DSA.2.7.5.2.  Access Methods for Local Users   Backbone sites which choose the option of having the ESnet DSA master   their organization's X.500 information should make the availability   of the X.500 service known to their local users.  All of the methods   described inSection 2.7.2 are available for use, but none of these   methods will assume the query is relative to the local site.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 19]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   To facilitate querying relative to the local environment, the site   will need to make one host available to run the emulation of the   FINGER service.  Although the resulting query will ultimately be   directed to the remote ESnet DSA, the search will appear to be local   to the users at that site.  For example, a user on a workstation at   site XYZ could type the following, omitting their local domain name   as this is implied:      finger jones@wp   This will retrieve information about user Jones at site XYZ (wp is   the name or alias of a host at site XYZ, i.e. wp.XYZ.GOV).  The site   coordinator will need to contact the ESnet DSA manager to arrange the   set up for this service.2.7.5.3.  Limitations of Using ESnet Services   Since the ESnet DSA will potentially be mastering information on   behalf of numerous backbone sites, limits will need to be placed on   the volume of site information stored in the ESnet DSAs.  These are   enforced to ensure DSA responsiveness, as well as to reduce   administrative maintenance.  The limits are:                 Item                       Maximum Limit                 ----                       -------------                 X.500 Organizations                    1                 Organizational Units                  50                 Organizational Unit Depth              3                 Object Entries                     5,000                 Update Frequency                 1 Month                 Aliases                              n/a                 Object/Attribute Access Control      n/a   One week before each monthly update cycle, a message will be sent on   the x500-ops@es.net mailer to remind the sites that an update cycle   is approaching.  If no changes are required to the site information,   the reminder message can be ignored and the existing version of this   information will be used. If the information is to be updated, a   complete replacement of all information must be supplied to the ESnet   DSA manager before the next update cycle.  More detailed information   and a sample of a site-supplied data file can be found inAppendix D.2.8.  ESnet Running a Level-0 DSA for c=US   For ESnet to provide high quality X.500 services to the ESnet   community, the ESnet DSAs must operate as Level-0 (first level) DSAs.   It is currently planned that these DSAs will act as slave, Level-0   DSAs to PSI's master, Level-0 DSAs.  Once the ESnet DSAs are inESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 20]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   production service, it is recommended that directly connected ESnet   backbone sites operating their own X.500 DSAs configure them with one   of the ESnet DSAs as their parent DSA.  This provides several   advantages to the ESnet community:   1.  The ESnet DSAs will be monitored by the NERSC's 24-hour       Operations Staff.  Additionally, ESnet plans to deploy two       (2) DSAs in geographically disperse locations to ensure       reliability and availability.   2.  All queries to Level-0 DSAs remain within the ESnet high-speed       backbone.   3.  If network connectivity is lost to all external Level-0 DSAs,       X.500 Level-0 connectivity will still exist within the ESnet       backbone.2.9.  X.500 Registration Requirements   X.500 organization names must be nationally unique if they appear   directly below the c=US level in the DIT structure.  Nationally   unique names must be registered through an appropriate registration   authority, i.e., one which grants nationally unique names.   X.500 organizational unit names need to be unique relative to the   node directly superior to them in the DIT.  Registration of these   names should be conducted through the "owner" of the superior node.   The registration of X.500 names below the organization level are   usually a local matter.  However, all siblings under a given node in   the DIT must have unique RDNs.   SeeSection 4 for a more complete description of OSI registration   issues and procedures.2.10.  Future X.500 Issues to be Considered2.10.1.  ADDMDS Interoperating with PRDMDS   This is a problem which currently does not have an answer.  The issue   of Administrative Directory Management Domains (ADDMDs) interacting   with Private Directory Management Domains (PRDMDs) is just beginning   to be investigated by several groups interested in solving this   problem.2.10.2.  X.400 Interaction with X.500   The current level of understanding is that X.400 can benefit from theESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 21]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   use of X.500 in two ways:   1.  Lookup of message recipient information.   2.  Lookup of message routing information.   X.400 technology and products, as they stand today, do not support   both of these features in a fully integrated fashion across multiple   vendors.  As the standards and technology evolve, consideration will   have to be given in applying these new functions to the production   ESnet X.500/X.400 services environment.2.10.3.  Use of X.500 for NIC Information   Work is currently being performed in the IETF to place NIC   information on-line in an Internet-based X.500 service.2.10.4.  Use of X.500 for Non-White Pages Information   The PSI White Pages Pilot Project has caused increasing and popular   use of X.500 as a white pages services within the Internet community.   However, the X.500 standard provides for much more than just this   service.  Application processes, devices and security objects are   just a few of the objects to be considered for future incorporation   in the global X.500 database.2.10.5.  Introduction of New X.500 Implementations   Thought will have to be given to the use of commercial X.500 products   in the future as QUIPU (the implementation recommended in this paper)   may not meet all of the needs of the ESnet community.  As commercial   products mature and become stable, they will have to be incorporated   into the ESnet X.500 service in a way which ensures interoperability   and reliability.2.10.6.  Interaction of X.500 and DECdns   There is every indication that DECdns and X.500 will interoperate in   some fashion in the future.  Since there is an evolving DECdns   namespace (i.e.  OMNI) and an evolving X.500 DIT (i.e. NADF), some   consideration should be given to how these two name trees will   interact.  All of this will be driven by the Digital Equipment   Corporation's decisions on how to expand and incorporate its DECdns   product with X.500.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 22]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 19923.  X.400 - OSI Message Handling Services3.1.  Brief Tutorial   In 1984 CCITT defined a set of protocols for the exchange of   electronic messages called Message Handling Systems (MHS) and is   described in their X.400 series of recommendations.  ISO incorporated   these recommendations in their standards (ISO 10021).  The name used   by ISO for their system was MOTIS (Message-Oriented Text Interchange   Systems).  In 1988 CCITT worked to align their X.400 recommendations   with ISO 10021.  Currently when people discuss messaging systems they   use the term X.400.  These two systems are designed for the general   purpose of exchanging electronic messages in a store and forward   environment.  The principle use being made of this system today is to   support electronic mail.  This section will give an overview of X.400   as used for electronic mail.  In the following sections, the term   X.400 will be used to describe both the X.400 and MOTIS systems.   The basic model used by X.400 MHS is that of a Message Transfer   System (MTS) accessed via a User Agent (UA).  A UA is an application   that interacts with the Message Transfer System to submit messages on   behalf of a user.  A user is referred to as either an Originator   (when sending a message) or a Recipient (when receiving one).  The   process starts out when an Originator prepares a message with the   assistance of their UA.  The UA then submits the message to the MTS   for delivery.  The MTS then delivers the message to one or more   Recipient UAs.                    _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _       ______      |      _______          _______     |     ______      |      |     | MTS |       |        |       |    |    |      |      |  UA  |<----|---->|  MTA  |<------>|  MTA  |<---|--->|  UA  |      |______|     |     |_______|        |_______|    |    |______|                   |_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _|   The MTS provides the general store-and-forward message transfer   service. It is made up of a number of distributed Message Transfer   Agents (MTA).  Operating together, the MTAs relay the messages and   deliver them to the intended recipient UAs, which then makes the   messages available to the recipient (user).   The basic structure of an X.400 message is an envelope and content   (i.e.  message).  The envelope carries information to be used when   transferring the message through the MTS.  The content is the piece   of information that the originating UA wishes delivered to the   recipient UA.  There are a number of content types that can be   carried in X.400 envelopes.  The standard user message content type   defined by X.400 is called the Interpersonal (IP) message.  An IPESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 23]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   message consists of two parts, the heading and body.  The heading   contains the message control information. The body contains the user   message.  The body may consist of a number of different body parts.   For example one IP message could carry voice, text, Telex and   facsimile body parts.   The Management domain (MD) concept within the X.400 recommendations   defines the ownership, operational and control boundary of an X.400   administration.  The collection consisting of at least one MTA and   zero or more UAs owned by an organization or public provider   constitutes a management domain (MD).  If the MD is managed by a   public provider it is called an Administration Management Domain   (ADMD).  The MD managed by a company or organization is called a   Private Management Domain (PRMD).  A Private MD is considered to   exist entirely within one country.  Within that country a PRMD may   have access to one or more ADMDs.   Each MD must ensure that every user (i.e UA) in the MD has at least   one name.  This name is called the Originator/Recipient (O/R) Name.   O/R Names are constructed from a set of standard attributes:   o  Country Name   o  Administration Management Domain   o  Private Management Domain   o  Organization Name   o  Organizational Unit Name   o  Surname   o  Given name   o  Initials   o  Generational Qualifier   An O/R name must locate one unambiguous O/R UA if the message is to   be routed correctly through the Message Transfer Service.  Currently   each MD along the route a message takes determines the next MD's MTA   to which the message should be transferred.  No attempt is made to   establish the full route for a message, either in the originating MD   or in any other MD that acquires the store and forward responsibility   for the message.   Messages are relayed by each MD on the basis of the Management domainESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 24]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   portion of their O/R Name until arrival at the recipient MD.  At   which point, the other attributes in the name are used to further   route to the recipient UA.  Internal routing within a MD is the   responsibility of each MD.3.2.  ESnet X.400 Logical Backbone   Currently within the ESnet community message handling services are   implemented with a number of different mail products, resulting in   what is classically known as an "n-squared" problem.  For example,   let's say that LLNL only uses QuickMail on site, PPPL only uses   MAIL-11 (VMS MAIL), and CEBAF only uses SMTP mail.  For LLNL to send   mail to PPPL and CEBAF, is must support MAIL-11 and SMTP locally on-   site.  Likewise for PPPL to send mail to LLNL and CEBAF, it must   support MAIL-11 and QuickMail locally.  Identically, this scenario   exists for CEBAF.   To alleviate this problem, a logical X.400 backbone must be   established through out the entire ESnet backbone.  Then, each ESnet   backbone site will be responsible for only providing connectivity   between it's local mail domains (QuickMail, MAIL-11, SMTP Mail, or   even native X.400) and the logical X.400 backbone.  One of the long-   term goals is to establish X.400 as the "common denominator" between   directly connected ESnet backbone sites.3.3.  Naming Structure   The name-spaces for X.500 and X.400 are completely different and are   structured to meet different needs.  The X.500 name-space is   typically organized to allow quick, optimized searching; while the   X.400 ORname is used to forward an X.400 message through several   "levels" of MTAs (X.400 Message Transfer Agents).   ESnet backbone sites will participate in the X.400 environment   through one of two options; either participating in the ESnet Private   Management Domain (PRMD) or operating a site PRMD.  For most sites,   utilizing the ESnet PRMD will be the simpler and preferable choice.3.3.1.  Participating in the ESnet Private Management Domain   ESnet backbone sites participating in the ESnet PRMD will have an   X.400 name syntax as follows:                   /.../O=<site>/PRMD=ESnet/ADMD= /C=US/   A few examples of a possible X.400 ORnames using the above syntax   are:ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 25]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992         /PN=Smith/OU=Computations/O=LLNL/PRMD=ESnet/ADMD= /C=US/            /PN=Jones/OU=Physics/O=PPPL/PRMD=ESnet/ADMD= /C=US/   These sites will operate an MTA at the /O=<organization> level in the   name hierarchy.3.3.2.  Operating a Site Private Management Domain   ESnet backbone sites which operate a PRMD will have an X.400 name   syntax as follows:                   /.../O=<org>/PRMD=<site>/ADMD= /C=US/   A few examples of a possible X.400 ORnames using the above syntax   are:              /PN=Smith/O=Computations/PRMD=LLNL/ADMD= /C=US/                /PN=Jones/O=Physics/PRMD=PPPL/ADMD= /C=US/   These sites will operate an MTA at the /PRMD=<PRMD> level in the name   hierarchy.  This MTA will peer with the ESnet PRMD MTA.3.3.3.  Detailed Name Structure   GOSIP places several limits on allowable ORnames.  After the   /O=<organization> name, up to four levels of   /OU=<organizational_unit> names are allowed.  The ORname string is   then completed with the /PN=<personal_name> field.   All ORname fields must use characters from the ISO printable   character set.  Additionally, the following name length restrictions   apply:                PRMD Names                    16 characters                Organization Names            64 characters                Organizational Unit Names     32 characters                Personal Names                64 characters      NOTE:  A 40 character limit for Personal Names is now being             studied by the CCITT.   Within these name constraints, the architecting of an organization's   name space is a local matter.  Sites are encouraged to consider ease   of use and stability when determining their naming structure.3.4.  X.400 Routing   In the IP environment a SMTP MTA could use the Domain Name ServiceESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 26]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   (DNS) to locate connection information for the host closest to the   recipient.  With X.400, MTAs must know the remote MTAs name and   password along with connection information.  This is because of   access control requirements on some X.400 systems.  In X.400 MHS this   information will, at some future date, be provided by X.500.  In the   mean time the routing and connection process within the X.400   community is table driven.  This solution requires a coordination and   distribution effort to ensure a quick and reliable update of these   tables.   The current thinking on the problem of X.400 routing is to decompose   the X.400 address space into a hierarchy, with each node in this   hierarchy representing the entry point for an X.400 domain.  These   nodes have been commonly called Well Known Entry Points (WEPs).  Each   of these WEPs represent one X.400 MHS domain.  For example:      /O=LBL/PRMD=ESnet/ADMD= /C=US/      /O=NERSC/PRMD=ESnet/ADMD= /C=US/      /PRMD=ESnet/ADMD= /C=US/      /PRMD=ANL/ADMD= /C=US/      /PRMD=PNL/ADMD= /C=US/   To minimize the number of hops between Originators and Recipients it   is the current recommendation of the X.400 community that every PRMD   peer with all other PRMDs.   The ESnet backbone will provide connectivity between multiple PRMDs   (the ESnet PRMD and any site operated PRMDs), each with associated   well-know entry point MTAs.  Each of these PRMD-level MTAs must be   configured with routing and mapping information about each other to   enable peer-to-peer PRMD routing.  These routing tables should be   updated immediately upon the discovery of new/changed X.400   connectivity information.  These tables will be made available to the   ESnet community via the ESnet Information Server.  Once placed on-   line, a notification message announcing the availability of this new   routing information will be sent to every WEP owner via the E-mail   mechanism described inSection 3.5.1.  It is recommended that WEP   administrators should retrieve this new routing information and   update their MTAs within 10 working days.   The well-known entry point MTA for each PRMD can route down to an   Organizational level MTA or laterally to the well-known entry point   of a peer PRMD MTA.   For example, the ESnet MTA would route a message with the address:               /PN=Funk/OU=CS/O=PPPL/PRMD=ESnet/ADMD= /C=US/ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 27]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   to a well-known entry point for PPPL (O=PPPL).  PPPL must own and   operate their own X.400 MTA, and it must be configured to accept   X.400 messages from the ESnet MTA.  Thus, the interpretation of   remaining "/PN=Funk/OU=CS" is left to the PPPL MTA to route.   Mail sent from PPPL's MTA would be routed to the ESnet's MTA (PRMD)   to be eventually routed to its destination.   The ESnet MTA will also route to peer MTAs which are well-known entry   points for other PRMDs (e.g. ESnet backbone site PRMDs, XNREN, Hughes   Air Craft, NASA, CDC).  For example, the ESnet MTA would route a   message with the address:                /PN=Smith/OU=MS/O=RL/PRMD=PNL/ADMD= /C=US/   to a well-known entry point for PNL (PRMD=PNL).  PNL must own and   operate their own X.400 MTA, and it must be configured to accept   X.400 messages from the ESnet MTA (as well as possibly other PRMDs).   Thus, the interpretation of the remaining "/PN=SMITH/OU=MS/O=RL" is   left to the PNL MTA to route.   Mail sent from PNL's MTA (PRMD) would be routed to the well-known   entry point for the PRMD indicated in the destination address.   Additionally, a site operated PRMD must be able to route mail to any   other peer-PRMD within the ESnet community.3.4.1.  Responsibilities in Operating an X.400 PRMD MTA   If the X.400 world were to operate exactly as the standard   recommends, PRMDs would only peer with other PRMDs when connectivity   is available and traffic demand is sufficient, and would utilize ADMD   services to reach all other PRMDs.  In reality, many PRMDs will not   subscribe to an ADMD service and will only be reachable through PRMD   peering.   Most communities, such as the ESnet, desire the fullest PRMD   interconnectivity possible to minimize the need for ADMD services.   Community PRMD operational requirements stem from a policy of   achieving large scale peering among PRMD operators within the   community.   Work is continuing in the IETF X.400 Operations Working Group to   produce an RFC that specifies the operational requirements that must   be implemented by X.400 Management Domains.  "Requirements for X.400   Management Domains (MDs) Operating in the Global Research and   Development X.400 Service", this document is listed inAppendix G.   ESnet will comply with all the requirements outlined in thisESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 28]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   document.  It is the recommendation that all ESnet PRMDs follow the   requirements specified in this document.   As an overview, this document specifies that each PRMD will provide   at least one WEP and that all PRMDs must be interconnected.  There   are a number of PRMDs in the International X.400 service that have   different communication stack requirements.  For example:                          Stack 1     Stack 2     Stack 3     Stack 4                          -------     -------     -------     -------     Transport Layer 4        TP0         TP4RFC-1006         TP0     Network Service 1-3     X.25        CLNS      TCP/IP        CONS   To meet the requirement that all PRMDs must be interconnected a PRMD   must support one or more of the above stacks.  For stacks that are   not supported the PRMD must negotiate with another PRMD or ADMD to   relay messages to a Management Domain that does support the other   stacks.   The PRMD requirements also suggest that PRMDs support downgrading of   X.400 1988 to X.400 1984.  Also, the PRMD must be reachable from the   Internet Mail service.  This means the PRMD must maintain an Internet   Mail/X.400 gateway.   In all cases, members of the ESnet community who operate a PRMD   should notify ESnet of the WEP and MTA information required to   perform peering.3.4.2.  Responsibilities in Operating an X.400 Organizational MTA   ESnet will provide PRMD service to the ESnet community.  ESnet will   peer with the other PRMDs in the International X.400 service and   provide a WEP for the ESnet community.  An Organization/site needs to   decide if they are going to comply with the above PRMD requirements   or act as an organization associated to the ESnet PRMD.  Minimally,   an organizational MTA will only have to support one of the protocol   stacks provided by it associated PRMD.  But in all cases, the site   will need to provide a WEP and register/list their MTA(s) with ESnet.3.5.  Services Provided by ESnet   ESnet will provide PRMD service to those members of the ESnet   community who desire it.  ESnet will peer with other PRMDs in the   International community (e.g. XNREN, Hughes Air Craft, NASA, CDC) and   provide a WEP for the ESnet community; the intent is to provide the   fullest PRMD level X.400 services.   ESnet will deploy two, PRMD level, X.400 MTAs in geographicallyESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 29]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   disperse locations.  These MTAs will be able to forward mail for   directly connected ESnet backbone sites, as well as to and from the   peered PRMDs.3.5.1.  X.400 Operations Mailing List   ESnet will provide an X.400 operations mailer for announcements and   to allow the sharing of X.400 operational information in the ESnet   community.      General discussion:  x400-ops@es.net      To subscribe:        x400-ops-request@es.net3.5.2.  MTA Routing Table on ESnet Information Server   ESnet will maintain forwarding information about ESnet community MTAs   at the /PRMD=<PRMD> or /O=<organization> levels (depending on what   level the site MTA is operating).  This information will be available   for use in configuring directly connected ESnet site operated MTAs.   This information will be made available in a machine independent   format on the ESnet Information Server.3.5.3.  MTA Routing Table Format   The ESnet staff will determine the details of information format,   update frequency, obtaining, and disseminating the information based   on operational experience and constraints.3.5.4.  Gateway Services and Multiprotocol Stack Support   The ESnet MTAs will minimally support bidirectional SMTP-X.400 mail   gateway capabilities, and will operate over the OSI CLNS protocol (as   defined by GOSIP) andRFC-1006 stacks.  Configuration and operation   of mail protocol gateway functions will be governed by the ESnet   staff.   Backbone site MTAs which service ORnames at the /O=<site> level under   the ESnet PRMD must utilize one of the ESnet PRMD supported protocol   stacks.  This requirement assures that all users of the ESnet PRMD   will be able to communicate to one another via the ESnet PRMD MTA.   Backbone site MTAs which service ORnames in PRMDs other than   /PRMD=ESnet must utilize the OSI CLNS stack for GOSIP conformance.   Use of theRFC-1006 stack is optional.  This requirement assures that   all PRMDs in the ESnet community will be able to peer with the ESnet   PRMD.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 30]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 19923.5.5.  Registering/Listing your PRMD or Organizational MTA with ESnet   To provide for the connection and routing requirements in X.400 you   will need to register/list your MTA with ESnet.  This information   will be maintained in tables on the ESnet Information Server.  ESnet   will also maintain information on the International X.400 service.   ESnet will use the same format for information as maintained by the   International X.400 service.  This is described in detail in a IETF   X.400 operations paper "Routing Coordination for X.400 MHS Services   within a Multiprotocol/Multinetwork Environment".  This paper is a   working draft, seeAppendix G.  It describes a machine independent   form for distribution of X.400 information.   There are three tables that must be maintained and exchanged by the   top level WEPS.   1.  The Community Document   2.  The WEP Document   3.  The Domain Document   ESnet will submit these documents to the International X.400   community on behalf of the ESnet Community.  If an ESnet PRMD wishes   to peer with the International PRMDs they will need to submit these   documents to that community.   The Community document is used to list the central coordination point   and file server where all MHS documents will be stored.  It also   lists the communication stacks used by the MHS community.  This   document will be submitted to the International X.400 service by   ESnet for the ESnet Community.  ESnet PRMDs and Organizations do not   need to submit this form to ESnet.  If an ESnet PRMD wishes to peer   with the International X.400 service then they must submit this form   to that community.   Each ESnet MHS domain will need to submit a WEP and Domain Document   to ESnet.  The WEP document is used to list the WEPs used by an ESnet   MHS domain.  It will contain all the information that is needed for   MTA connection and access control.  ESnet will submit the ESnet   community WEP and Domain Documents to the International X.400   service.  The WEP document consists of a list of WEPs, with the   following information for each one:   o  The MTA Name   o  PasswordESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 31]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   o  Which MTS supported   o  Which standard, 84 and/or 88   o  Connection information outbound   o  Connection information inbound   o  Computer system information   o  Point of contact   The Domain Document specifies all the X.400 domains managed by a   site.  It indicates the person responsible and which WEP services   which Domain.  This document contains the following information   repeated for each Domain:   o  X.400 Domain   o  Point of Contact   o  Relaying WEP(s)3.6.  X.400 Message Routing Between ADMDS and PRMDS   While ESnet will provide X.400 routing service for systems, it cannot   provide routing via commercial X.400 carriers at this time.  The   FTS-2000 charge for routing X.400 messages is $.45 (US) plus X.25   packet charges.  This could result in a charge of several dollars for   large messages, a real possibility with the multi-media capacity of   X.400.  The payment of this fee is not within the charter of ESnet   and the provision of a charging mechanism to charge member sites is   not currently contemplated.3.7.  X.400 Registration Requirements   It is recommended by the CCITT that all X.400 PRMD names be   nationally unique.  This is a current CCITT agreement and allows   direct PRMD-PRMD peer routing.  Since national uniqueness is   required, registration should be performed through an appropriate   registration authority (such as ANSI).   X.400 organization names must be unique within a PRMD.  There is no   need for national uniqueness.  Registration of an X.400 organization   name should be conducted through the PRMD operator.   The registration of X.400 names below the organization level are   usually a local matter.  Uniqueness within the context of a superiorESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 32]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   name should always be maintained.   SeeSection 4 for a more complete description of OSI registration   issues and procedures.3.8.  Future X.400 Issues to be Considered3.8.1.  X.400 Mail Routing to International DOE Researchers   Currently there are DOE researchers located in Switzerland, Japan,   Germany, China and Brazil.  PRMD level connectivity to these   international locations does not exist presently.  Since ESnet is not   chartered to pay for commercial X.400 services on behalf of the ESnet   community, "buying" this service is not a viable option.   There are efforts taking place to provide international X.400 service   over the (international) Internet.  Once this becomes fully   operational, further research will have to be performed to see if   this provides the X.400 connectivity needed to support the DOE   researchers located abroad.3.8.2.  X.400 (1984) and X.400 (1988)   The ESnet MTAs will initially support the 1984 version of the X.400   standard.  As the use of 1988 X.400 becomes more prevalent, support   for the newer standard will need to be addressed.  One important   point, once the ESnet MTAs become 1988 X.400 compliant, they will   also have so support "downgrading" to 1984 X.400 to ensure reliable   X.400 mail delivery to the ESnet community.3.8.3.  X.400 Interaction with X.500   This is discussed inSection 2.10.2.4.  OSI Name Registration and Issues   Implementing OSI services requires that certain information objects   (e.g., people, information processing systems and applications) must   be unambiguously identifiable on a global basis.  These objects may   be defined by a variety of organizations, e.g., ISO/IEC, CCITT,   commercial, and government.   To meet this requirement ISO/IEC and CCITT have established a   hierarchical structure of names (a tree).  The top level of the   naming tree, shared by ISO and CCITT, represents the global naming-   domain.  Naming domains are managed by registration authorities.  A   registration authority can delegate authority for part of its   naming-domain to another (lower level) registration authority, thusESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 33]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   forming the tree.   Each object can be given a unique and unambiguous name by registering   the object's name with an OSI registration authority at an   appropriate level in the naming tree.   OSI name registration authorities and their procedures are expected   to change over time.  Since names are intended to be stable, these   changes (hopefully!) will have minimal impact on existing OSI name   registrations.   This section describes the role of OSI registration authorities, the   difference between a "registration" and a "notification", and sources   of nationally unique names.  Information about three OSI name   registration authorities; the American National Standards Institute   (ANSI), the General Services Administration (GSA), and the U.S.   Department of Energy (U.S. DOE); are given.   Registration of a name often requires stating a "right" to that name.   However, an OSI name registration does not guarantee legal name   rights. Name rights should be reviewed by legal experts prior to   registration. Information about the U.S. Department of Commerce,   Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) (potentially useful in asserting or   defending name rights) is given below.4.1.  Registration Authorities   OSI names are obtained through OSI name registration authorities by a   registration process.  The selection of which particular registration   authority to use is determined by the desired level of the OSI name   in the naming hierarchy, possible restrictions on the names allocated   by each registration authority, and the applicability rules (will   they service your request) of each registration authority.   An OSI name registration authority allocates OSI names from the   particular naming-domain it controls.  Every registration authority   can trace its naming authority to its parent registration authority,   and ultimately to the top (global) level of the naming hierarchy.4.2.  Registration Versus Notification   Registering an OSI name guarantees its uniqueness and lack of   ambiguity. For a name to be useful however, other parties (besides   the registration authority) will need to be notified of the name and   its usage.   There is a clear distinction between registration (obtaining an OSI   name) and notification (informing others of a name and its use).ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 34]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Often the term "registration" is used to describe both activities,   this is a potential source of confusion.   For example, NADF and PSI (seeSection 2) are not OSI registration   authorities.  NADF may operate state registration authorities in the   future, if delegated that administrative right by the states.  PSI   operates an X.500 pilot project and needs to be notified of   registered names when organizations join their pilot.   X.400 ADMD operators are also not OSI registration authorities,   although they accept notification of X.400 PRMD names used by their   customers.   The PTO is not an OSI registration authority.  PTO names have no   meaning in an OSI context.4.3.  Sources of Nationally Unique Name Registration   There are four potential sources of nationally unique names which are   of interest to the ESnet community.  These are ANSI, GSA, U.S. DOE   and the states.  An overview of the ANSI, GSA, and U.S. DOE   procedures are given in later sections.   In order to maintain national uniqueness "constructed name syntax" is   used by GSA, U.S. DOE, and the states.  The form of each name is   shown below, "name" is the name presented to the registration   authority for registration.   1.  ANSI names are of the form "name".   2.  GSA names are of the form "GOV+name".   3.  U.S. DOE names are of the form "GOV+USDOE+name".   4.  State names are of the form "CA+name" (using California).   State name registration authorities are not in operation at this   time.  The use of U.S. DOE as a nationally unique name registration   source is not recommended due to the awkwardness of a double   constructed name.4.4.  How to Apply for ANSI Organization Names   ANSI is the root U.S. source of OSI recognized nationally unique   organization names.  ANSI registration costs $2500 and results in   both an alphanumeric name and an associated numeric name.  These   names may be used for a variety of purposes in X.400, X.500, and   other OSI services.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 35]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   For ANSI OSI organization name registration forms and instructions,   you should send your request to:                American National Standards Institute, Inc.                Attn:  Beth Somerville                OSI Registration Coordinator                11 West 42nd Street                New York, NY   10036                Phone:  (212) 642-4976   ANSI registration procedures include a 90 day public review period   during which name requests can be easily challenged.   There is a mechanism to forward ANSI requests to the GSA, it is   discussed in the GSA section below.4.5.  How to Apply for GSA Organization Names   GSA is the registration authority for government use of GOSIP, their   registration services are free for federal government organizations.   Names assigned by GSA always begin with the characters "GOV+" and are   limited to 16 characters.  By agreement with ANSI, these GSA assigned   names are national unique.   For GSA OSI Organization Name registration forms and instructions,   you should send your request to:                  General Services Administration                  Office of Telecommunications Services                  Registration Services, Room 1221-L KBA                  18th and F Streets, N.W.                  Washington, D.C. 204054.5.1.  GSA Designated Agency Representatives   When preparing the GSA registration form a designated agency   representative must sign where it says "Registration Official Name   and Signature".  GSA will refuse requests missing this signature.   The GSA designated Agency Representative for the Department of Energy   is:ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 36]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992                    Steve Hackman                    Electronics Engineer                    U.S. Department of Energy                    AD-241.3/GTN                    Washington, D.C. 20585                    Office Phone:  (301) 903-6111                    Office FAX:    (301) 903-4125                    E-Mail:  hackman@gosip.xosi.doe.gov4.5.2.  Forwarding of ANSI Registrations to GSA   ANSI registration requests can be forwarded automatically to the GSA.   This is the equivalent of registering with both ANSI and GSA.  The   result is two nationally unique OSI name registrations, "name" from   ANSI and "GOV+name" from GSA.   There is no GOSIP requirement for GSA registration but many feel the   additional GSA registration may be useful.   Assuming your organization is a federal government organization,   answer the last three questions on the ANSI registration form as   shown below:   1.  Do you wish the information supplied in the request to remain       confidential?  NO.   2.  Do you wish to have your organization name registered with the       U.S. GOSIP Registration Authority (a.k.a. GSA)?  YES.   3.  Is your organization an organization of the Federal Government?       YES.   You must indicate on the application form the approval of the GSA   designated agency representative (Steve Hackman).  He does not sign   as "Signature of Requestor", but some notation of his approval must   be attached or GSA will reject the forwarded application.4.6.  How to Apply for U.S. DOE Organization Names   ESnet sites are encouraged to review the DOE GOSIP procedures and   guidelines in planning their GOSIP activities.  This document does   not conflict with current DOE GOSIP policies.   DOE can assign nationally unique names which are prefixed by the   string "GOV+USDOE+".  Use of this name source is not recommended;   there is no apparent advantage in using U.S. DOE over GSA as a source   of nationally unique names.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 37]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Copies of current U.S. DOE GOSIP policies, guidelines, and   registration forms may be obtained through site DOE naming   authorities or Steve Hackman.4.7.  Why Apply for a Trademark with the PTO?   Legal issues may arise concerning the rights to use a desired name.   OSI name registrations are not intended to "legally protect" name   usage rights; that is not their function.   Consultation with legal experts concerning the rights to use a name   being registered is strongly advised, this recommendation does not   offer specific legal guidance.  Applying for a trademark may be   considered as a means to assert or protect the rights to a name.   Per the PTO trademark application instructions there may be several   benefits in obtaining a trademark.   o  The filing date of the application is a constructive date of      first use of the mark in commerce (this gives registrant      nationwide priority as of the date).   o  The right to sue in Federal court for trademark infringement.   o  Constructive notice of claim of ownership.   o  Limited grounds for attacking a registration once it is five      years old.4.8.  How to Apply for a Trademark with the PTO   You should obtain a trademark application and detailed instructions   from the U.S. Department of Commerce, Patent and Trademark Office.   This can be done by mailing your request to the address below, or   calling the PTO at the phone number below:                       U.S. Department of Commerce                       Patent and Trademark Office                       Washington, D.C.   20231                       Phone:  (703) 557-INFO   NOTE:  The following information is based on ESnet experience in          filing for a trademark based on prior use.   After you receive your application, you will need to perform the   following steps.   1.  Complete the written application form.  If you have more thanESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 38]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992       one name you are filing, you must complete a separate form for       each name.   2.  Provide a black-and-white drawing of the mark.  In the case       where there is no artwork, only text, the text must be       centered on the page in uppercase.   3.  Provide a check in the amount of $175 (for each application)       made payable to the Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks.   4.  Provide three specimens showing actual use of the mark on or       in connection with the goods or services.   The class of goods/services associated with this trademark must be   specified on the registration form.  The currently defined classes of   services are:                     35  Advertising and business.                     36  Insurance and financial.                     37  Construction and repair.                     38  Communication.                     39  Transportation and storage.                     40  Material treatment.                     41  Education and entertainment.                     42  Miscellaneous.   So, for example, there could be two (or more) "ESnet" trademarks,   with each trademark associated with a different service class.  Thus,   trademarks are not nationally unique.   Before submitting your form, you should see if your trademark is   already registered to someone else (for the service class you   specified).  This is typically done by your legal department through   the PTO Trademark Search Library.   Since the PTO form is a legal document, you must involve your legal   department and the documents may only be signed by someone who is a   legally recognized representative of your organization.  For example,   in applying for the service mark "ESnet", the "Applicant Name" was   "The Regents of the University of California", and the legally   recognized representative was Dr. John Nuckolls, the director of the   Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.4.9.  Future Name Registration Issues to be Considered4.9.1.  ANSI Registered ADMD and PRMD Names   There are discussions in the ANSI and CCITT communities revolvingESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 39]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   around the idea of having a formal registration of all ADMD and PRMD   Names (not just ANSI Organization Names).  The ideas being exchanged   include having a separate ANSI national registry for these names, and   having to pay a periodic "license" fee.  This is just in the idea   discussion phase now, but it may impact the cost of ANSI ADMD and   PRMD Name registration in the near future.GlossaryAA - See ADMINISTRATIVE AUTHORITY.ADDMD - See ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTORY MANAGEMENT DOMAIN.ADMD - See ADMINISTRATION MANAGEMENT DOMAIN.ADMINISTRATION - An Administration denotes a public telecommunications     administration or other organization offering public     telecommunications services.ADMINISTRATION MANAGEMENT DOMAIN - An Administrative Management Domain     (ADMD) is a management domain managed by an Administration;     generally one of the common carriers (e.g. AT&T, MCI, U.S. Sprint,     etc.).ADMINISTRATIVE AUTHORITY - An entity which has administrative control     over all entries stored within a single Directory System Agent     (DSA).ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTORY MANAGEMENT DOMAIN - An Administrative Directory     Management Domain (ADDMD) is a Directory Management Domain (DMD)     which is managed by an administration.AE - See APPLICATION ENTITY.ALIAS - An entry of the class "alias" containing information used to     provide an alternative name for an object.ANSI - The American National Standards Institute.  ANSI is the official     representative of the United States to ISO.AP - See APPLICATION PROCESS.APPLICATION ENTITY - An application entity is the OSI portion of an     Application Process (AP).APPLICATION LAYER - The application layer is the portion of an OSI     system ultimately responsible for managing communication between     application processes (APs).ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 40]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992APPLICATION PROCESS - An application process is an object executing in a     real system (computer).APPLICATION SERVICE ELEMENT - An application service element (ASE) is     the building block of an application entity (AE).  Each AE consists     of one or more service elements, as defined by its application     context.ASE - See APPLICATION SERVICE ELEMENT.ATTRIBUTE - An attribute is the information of a particular type     concerning an object and appearing in an entry describing that     object in the Directory Information base (DIB).ATTRIBUTE TYPE - An attribute type is that component of an attribute     which indicates the class of information given by that attribute.ATTRIBUTE VALUE - An attribute value is a particular instance of the     class of information indicated by an attribute type.BASE ATTRIBUTE SET - A minimum set of attributes whose values     unambiguously identify a particular management domain.BODY - The body of the IP-message is the information the user wishes to     communicate.CCITT - An international standards making organization specializing in     international communications standards and chartered by the United     Nations.  "CCITT" is a french acronym meaning the International     Telephone and Telegraph Consultative Committee.CHAINING - Chaining is a mode of interaction optionally used by a     Directory System Agent (DSA) which cannot perform an operation     itself.  The DSA chains by invoking the operation of another DSA     and then relaying the outcome to the original requestor.CLNP - The OSI Connectionless Network Protocol.  CLNP's use is required     by GOSIP.CONTENT - The piece of information that the originating User Agent (UA)     wishes delivered to the recipient UA.  For inter-personal messaging     (IPM) UAs, the content consists of either an IP message or an IPM-     status-report.COOPERATING USER AGENT - A User Agent (UA) that cooperates with another     recipient's UA in order to facilitate the communication between     originator and recipient.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 41]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992DAP - See DIRECTORY ACCESS PROTOCOL.DELIVERY - The interaction by which the Message Transfer Agent (MTA)     transfers to a recipient User Agent (UA) the content of a message     plus the delivery envelope.DELIVERY ENVELOPE - The envelope which contains the information related     to the delivery of the message.DESCRIPTIVE NAME - A name that denotes one and only one user in the     Message Handling System (MHS).DIB - See DIRECTORY INFORMATION BASE.DIRECTORY - The Directory is a repository of information about objects     and which provides directory services to its users which allow     access to the information.DIRECTORY ACCESS PROTOCOL - The Directory Access Protocol (DAP) is the     protocol used between a Directory user Agent (DUA) and a Directory     System Agent (DSA).DIRECTORY ENTRY - A Directory Entry is a part of the Directory     Information Base (DIB) which contains information about an object.DIRECTORY INFORMATION BASE - The Directory Information Base (DIB) is the     complete set of information to which the Directory provides access     and which includes all pieces of information which can be read or     manipulated using the operations of the Directory.DIRECTORY INFORMATION TREE - The Directory Information Tree (DIT) is the     Directory Information Base (DIB), considered as a tree, whose     vertices (other than the root) are the Directory entries.DIRECTORY MANAGEMENT DOMAIN - A Directory Management Domain (DMD) is a     collection of one or more Directory System Agents (DSAs) and zero     or more Directory User Agents (DUAs) which is managed by a single     organization.DIRECTORY SYSTEM AGENT - A Directory System Agent (DSA) is an OSI     application process which is part of the Directory.DIRECTORY SYSTEM PROTOCOL - The Directory System Protocol (DSP) is the     protocol used between two Directory System Agents (DSAs).DIRECTORY USER - A Directory user is the entity or person that accesses     the Directory.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 42]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992DIRECTORY USER AGENT - A Directory User Agent (DUA) is an OSI     application process which represents the user in accessing the     Directory.DISTINGUISHED NAME - The distinguished name of a given object is the     sequence of relative distinguished names (RDNs) of an entry which     represents the object and those of all of its superior entries (in     descending order).DIT - See DIRECTORY INFORMATION TREE.DMD - See DIRECTORY MANAGEMENT DOMAIN.DN - See DISTINGUISHED NAME.DNS - See DOMAIN NAME SERVICE.DOMAIN NAME SERVICE - A hierarchical, distributed naming service     currently used in the Internet.  DNS names typically take the form     of <machine.site.domain>, where <.domain> may be ".COM", ".EDU",     ".GOV", ".MIL", ".NET", ".ORG" or ".<country-code>".DSA - See DIRECTORY SYSTEM AGENT.DSP - See DIRECTORY SYSTEM PROTOCOL.DUA - See DIRECTORY USER AGENT.ENCODED INFORMATION TYPE - It is the code and format of information that     appears in the body of an IP-message (examples of coded information     types are Telex, TIFO (Group 4 Facsimile), and voice).ENVELOPE - A place in which the information to be used in the     submission, delivery and relaying of a message is contained.FIPS - Federal Information Processing Standard.  FIPS are produced by     NIST and specify a standard for the federal government, most FIPS     reference other formal standards from ANSI, IEEE, ISO or CCITT.GOSIP - The Government Open System Interconnection (OSI) Profile.  GOSIP     is a FIPS which defines the elements of OSI to be required by     government purchasers and how those elements should be implemented.     GOSIP is based on OSI standards and OIW implementor's agreements.HEADING - The heading of an IP-message is the control information that     characterizes an IP-message.INTERPERSONAL MESSAGING - Interpersonal Messaging (IPM) is communicationESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 43]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992     between persons by exchanging messages.INTERPERSONAL MESSAGING SERVICE - The set of service elements which     enable users to exchange interpersonal messages.INTERPERSONAL MESSAGING SYSTEM - An Interpersonal Messaging System     (IPMS) is the collection of User Agents (UAs) and Message Transfer     Agents (MTAs), which provide the Interpersonal Messaging Service.IP - A non-OSI network protocol, the Internet Protocol, used extensively     in the Internet.  CLNP is the OSI alternative to IP.IP-MESSAGE - An IP-message carries information generated by and     transferred between Interpersonal Messaging (IPM) User Agents     (UAs).  An IP-message contains a Heading and a Body.IPM - See INTERPERSONAL MESSAGING.IPM-STATUS-REPORT - The pieces of information generated by an     Interpersonal Messaging (IPM) User Agent Entity (UAE) and     transferred to another IPM UAE, either to be used by that UAE or to     be conveyed to the user.IPMS - See INTERPERSONAL MESSAGING SYSTEM.ISO - An international standards making organization which, among other     things, develops OSI standards.MANAGEMENT DOMAIN - The set of Message Handling System (MHS) entities     managed by an Administration or organization that includes at least     one Message Transfer Agent (MTA).MD - See MANAGEMENT DOMAIN.MESSAGE - In the context of Message Handling Systems (MHSs), the unit of     information transferred by the Message Transfer System (MTS).  It     consists of an envelope and a content.MESSAGE HANDLING ADDRESS - An Originator/Recipient (O/R) address which     is comprised of an Administrative Management Domain (ADMD), a     country name, and a set of user attributes.MESSAGE HANDLING SYSTEM - The set of User Agents (UAs) plus the Message     Transfer System (MTS).MESSAGE TRANSFER AGENT - The functional component that, together with     the other Message Transfer Agents (MTAs), constitutes the Message     Transfer System (MTS).  The MTAs provide message transfer serviceESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 44]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992     elements by:  (1) interacting with originating User Agents (UAs)     via the submission dialogue, (2) relaying messages to other MTAs     based upon recipient designations, and (3) interacting with     recipient UAs via the delivery dialogue.MESSAGE TRANSFER AGENT ENTITY - The Message Transfer Agent Entity (MTAE)     is an entity, located in an MTA, that is responsible for     controlling the Message Transfer Layer (MTL).  It controls the     operation of the protocol to other peer entities in the MTL.MESSAGE TRANSFER LAYER - The Message Transfer Layer (MTL) is a layer in     the Application layer that provides Message Transfer System (MTS)     service elements.  These services are provided by means of the     services of the layer below plus the functionality of the entities     in the layer, namely the Message Transfer Agent Entities (MTAEs)     and the Submission and Delivery Entities (SDEs).MESSAGE TRANSFER PROTOCOL - The Message Transfer Protocol (P1) is the     protocol which defines the relaying of messages between Message     Transfer Agents (MTAs) and other interactions necessary to provide     Message Transfer layer (MTL) services.MESSAGE TRANSFER SERVICE - The Message Transfer Service is the set of     optional service elements provided by the Message Transfer System     (MTS).MESSAGE TRANSFER SYSTEM - The Message Transfer System (MTS) is the     collection of Message Transfer Agents (MTAs), which provide the     Message Transfer Service elements.MHS - See MESSAGE HANDLING SYSTEM.MTA - See MESSAGE TRANSFER AGENT.MTAE - See MESSAGE TRANSFER AGENT ENTITY.MTL - See MESSAGE TRANSFER LAYER.MTS - See MESSAGE TRANSFER SYSTEM.MULTICASTING - Multicasting is a mode of interaction which may     optionally be used by a Directory System Agent (DSA) which cannot     perform an operation itself.  The DSA multicasts the operation     (i.e. it invokes the operation of several other DSAs (in series or     in parallel) and passes an appropriate outcome to the original     requestor).NAME - A name is a construct that singles out a particular object fromESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 45]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992     all other objects.  A name must be unambiguous (i.e. denote just     one object); however, it need not be unique (i.e. be the only name     which unambiguously denotes the object).NIST - The national institute of standards, a government organization     which develops, endorses, and promulgates standards for use by the     U.S.  government.O/R ADDRESS - See ORIGINATOR/RECIPIENT ADDRESS.O/R NAME - See ORIGINATOR/RECIPIENT NAME.OBJECT (OF INTEREST) - Anything in some "world", generally the world of     telecommunications and information processing or some part thereof,     which is identifiable (i.e. can be named), and which it is of     interest to hold information on in the Directory Information Base     (DIB).OIW - The OSI Implementors workshop.  OIW is one of three regional     workshops (OIW, EWOS, AOW), which specifies implementation     agreements for base OSI standards.  OIW's participants are mostly     from the Americas and the OIW is jointly sponsored by the IEEE     (Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers) and NIST.OPEN SYSTEMS INTERCONNECTION - A term referring to the capability of     interconnecting different systems.ORIGINATING USER AGENT - The Originating User Agent (UA) is a UA that     submits to the Message Transfer System (MTS) a message to be     transferred.ORIGINATOR - A user, a human being or computer process, from whom the     Message Handling System (MHS) accepts a message.ORIGINATOR/RECIPIENT ADDRESS - A descriptive name for a User Agent (UA)     that contains certain characteristics which help the Message     Transfer System (MTS) to locate the UA's point of attachment.  An     Originator/Recipient (O/R) address is a type of O/R name.ORIGINATOR/RECIPIENT NAME - The Originator/Recipient Name (O/R Name) is     the descriptive name for a User Agent (UA).OSI - See OPEN SYSTEMS INTERCONNECTION.PRDMD - See PRIVATE DIRECTORY MANAGEMENT DOMAIN.PRIMITIVE NAME - A name assigned by a naming authority.  Primitive names     are components of descriptive names.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 46]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992PRIVATE DIRECTORY MANAGEMENT DOMAIN - A Private Directory Management     Domain (PRDMD) is a Directory Management Domain which is managed by     an organization other than an administration.PRIVATE MANAGEMENT DOMAIN - A Private Management Domain (PRMD) is a     management domain managed by a company or non-commercial     organization.PRMD - See PRIVATE MANAGEMENT DOMAIN.RDN - See RELATIVE DISTINGUISHED NAME.RECIPIENT - A user, a human being or computer process, who receives a     message from the Message Handling System (MHS).RECIPIENT USER AGENT - A User Agent (UA) to which a message is delivered     or that is specified for delivery.REFERRAL - A referral is an outcome which can be returned by a Directory     System Agent (DSA) which cannot perform an operation itself, and     which identifies one or more other DSAs more able to perform the     operation.RELATIVE DISTINGUISHED NAME - A Relative Distinguished Name (RDN) is a     set of attribute value assertions, each of which is true,     concerning the distinguished values of a particular entry.RELAYING - The interaction by which one Message Transfer Agent (MTA)     transfers to another MTA the content of a message plus the relaying     envelope.RELAYING ENVELOPE - The envelope which contains the information related     to the operation of the Message Transfer System (MTS) plus the     service elements requested by the originating User Agent (UA).RFC - Request for Comments.  The RFC's are documents used to propose or     specify internet community standards.ROOT - The vertex that is not the final vertex of any arc is referred to     as the root vertex (or informally as the root) of the tree.SCHEMA - The Directory Schema is the set of rules and constraints     concerning the Directory Information Tree (DIT) structure, object     class definitions, attribute types, and syntaxes which characterize     the Directory Information base (DIB).SDE - See SUBMISSION AND DELIVERY ENTITY.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 47]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992SMTP - Simple Mail Transfer Protocol.  An e-mail protocol frequently     used by the Internet community.SUBMISSION - The interaction by which an originating User Agent (UA)     transfers to a Message Transfer Agent (MTA) the contents of a     message plus the submission envelope.SUBMISSION AND DELIVERY ENTITY - The Submission and Delivery Entity     (SDE) is an entity located in the Message Transfer Layer (MTL),     co-resident with a User Agent (UA) and not with a Message Transfer     Agent (MTA), and responsible for controlling the submission and     delivery interactions with a Message Transfer Agent Entity (MTAE).SUBMISSION AND DELIVERY PROTOCOL - The Submission and Delivery Protocol     (P3) is the protocol which governs communication between a     Submission and Delivery Entity (SDE) and a Message Transfer Agent     Entity (MTAE).SUBMISSION ENVELOPE - The envelope which contains the information the     Message Transfer System (MTS) requires to provide the requested     service elements.TCP - A non-OSI transport protocol, the Transmission Control Protocol,     used extensively in the Internet.  TP4 is the OSI alternative to     TCP.TP0 - An OSI transport protocol specified by GOSIP and generally used     with connection-oriented networks.TP4 - An OSI transport protocol specified by GOSIP and generally used     with connectionless networks such as CLNP.TREE - A tree is a set of points (vertices), and a set of directed lines     (arcs); each arc leads from a vertex V to a vertex V'.  The     vertices V and V' are said to be the initial and final vertices of     an arc a from V to V'.  In a tree, several different arcs may have     the same initial vertex, but not the same final vertex.UA - See USER AGENT.UAE - See USER AGENT ENTITY.UAL - See USER AGENT LAYER.USER - A person or computer application or process who makes use of a     Message Handling System (MHS).USER AGENT - Typically, the User Agent (UA) is a set of computerESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 48]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992     processes (for example, an editor, a file system, a word processor)     that are used to create, inspect, and manage the storage of     messages.  There is typically one user per User Agent (UA).  During     message preparation, the originator communicates with his UA via an     input/output (I/O) device (for example, a keyboard, display,     printer, facsimile machine, and/or telephone).  Also by means of     these devices, the UA communicates to its user messages received     from the Message Transfer System (MTS).  To send and receive     messages, the UA interacts with the MTS via the submission and     delivery protocol.USER AGENT ENTITY - A User Agent Entity (UAE) is an entity in the User     Agent Layer (UAL) of the Application Layer that controls the     protocol associated with cooperating UAL services.  It exchanges     control information with the Message Transfer Agent Entity (MTAE)     or the Submission and Delivery Entity (SDE) in the layer below.     The control information is the information the Message Transfer     layer (MTL) requires to create the appropriate envelope and thus     provide the desired message transfer service elements.USER AGENT LAYER - The User Agent Layer (UAL) is the layer that contains     the User Agent Entities (UAEs).X.25 - A packet switched network standard often used by public providers     and optional in GOSIP.Appendix A:  Current Activities in X.500   NOTE:  The following are edited excerpts from the IETF Directory   Services Monthly reports as well as a few IETF scope documents.   Effort has been taken to make sure this information is current as of   late 1991.  At the end of each section are lists of anonymous FTP   and/or an e-mail address if more information is desired.                                 IETF DISI       (Directory Information Services Infrastructure Working Group)   The Directory Information Services (pilot) Infrastructure Working   Group is chartered to facilitate the deployment in the Internet of   Directory Services based on implementations of the X.500 standards.   It will facilitate this deployment by producing informational RFCs   intended to serve as a Directory Services "Administrator's Guide".   These RFCs will relate the current usage and scope of the X.500   standard and Directory Services in North America and the world, and   will contain information on the procurement, installation, and   operation of various implementations of the X.500 standard.  As the   various implementations of the X.500 standard work equally well over   TCP/IP and CLNP, the DISI working group shall not mandate specificESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 49]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   implementations or transport protocols.   DISI is an offshoot of the OSI Directory Services group, and,   accordingly, is a combined effort of the OSI Integration Area and   User Services Area of the IETF.  The current OSIDS working group was   chartered to smooth out technical differences in information storage   schema and difficulties in the interoperability and coherence of   various X.500 implementations.  The DISI group is concerned solely   with expanding the Directory Services infrastructure.  As DISI will   be providing information to facilitate the building of infrastructure   with an eye towards truly operational status, DISI will need to form   liaisons with COSINE, PARADISE, and perhaps the RARE WG3.   As a final document, the DISI working group shall write a charter for   a new working group concerned with user services, integration,   maintenance and operations of Directory Services, the Operations and   Infrastructure of Directory Services (OIDS) Group.   One particular DISI document you may be interested in is a catalogue   of the various X.500 implementations:      Title     : Catalog of Available X.500 Implementations      Author(s) : R. Lang, R. Wright      Filename  :rfc1292.txt      Pages     : 103   This document is available on the ESnet Information Server in the   [ANONYMOUS.RFCS] directory.   Mailing list address:      General Discussion:  disi@merit.edu      To Subscribe:        disi-request@merit.edu   Anonymous FTP site address:  (e-mail archive is here)      merit.edu             IETF OSI-DS (OSI Directory Service Working Group)   The OSI-DS group works on issues relating to building an OSI   Directory Service using X.500 and its deployment on the Internet.   Whilst this group is not directly concerned with piloting, the focus   is practical, and technical work needed as a pre-requisite to   deployment of an open Directory will be considered.   The major goal of this WG is to provide the technical framework for a   Directory Service infrastructure on the Internet.  This   infrastructure should be based on the OSI Directory (X.500).  It is   intended that this infrastructure can be used by many applications.   Whilst this WG is not directly concerned with operation of services,ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 50]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   close liaison is expected with those groups which do operate pilots   and services.   Liaisons have been established with RARE WG3, NIST, CCITT/ISO IEC,   North American Directory Forum.   X.500 (1984) / ISO 9594 does not have sufficient functionality for   full deployment on the Internet.  This group identifies areas where   extensions are required.   It is a basic aim of the group to be aligned to appropriate base   standards and functional standards.  Any activity should be   undertaken in the light of ongoing standardization activity.  Areas   which should be examined include:   o  Replication   o  Knowledge Representation   o  Schema Management   o  Access Control   o  Authentication   o  Distributed operations for partially connected DSAs   o  Presentation Address Handling   Mailing list address:      General Discussion:  osi-ds@cs.ucl.ac.uk      To Subscribe:        osi-ds-request@cs.ucl.ac.uk   Anonymous FTP site address:  (all OSI-DS documents and e-mail archive      cs.ucl.ac.uk               are here)                   FOX (Field Operational X.500 Project)   The FOX project is a DARPA funded effort to provide a basis for   operational X.500 deployment in the NREN/Internet.  This work is   being carried out at Merit, NYSERnet/PSI, SRI and ISI.  ISI is the   main contractor and responsible for project oversight.   There are two primary thrusts of the FOX project:   1.  X.500 Infrastructure:  It is important that multiple       interoperable platforms be available for deployment.  FOX       plans to examine and test the interoperability of the QUIPU       and NIST-X.500 (Custos) implementations, and DNANS-X.500 ifESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 51]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992       possible.  In addition, FOX will explore X.500 interfaces to       conventional database systems (one target is Sybase), an       alternate OS platform (VM) for X.500 servers, and X-window       based user interfaces.   2.  X.500 Applications:  A long-range goal is to facilitate the       use of X.500 for real Internet applications.  FOX will first       focus on making network infrastructure information available       through X.500.  This includes network and AS site contacts,       topology information, and the NIC WHOIS service.   A centrally managed X.500 version will be the first phase of a WHOIS   service.  Providing an X.500 version of a well-known widely-used   service should promote the use of X.500 by Internet users.  In   addition, this effort will provide experience in designing X.500   applications.  However, the manageability of this scheme will be   short-lived, so the next step will be a design for a distributed   version of WHOIS.   Finally, it is critical for Internet X.500 efforts to be aligned with   directory service efforts that are ongoing in other communities.  FOX   participants are involved in, or are otherwise tracking these   efforts, and information about FOX activities will be publicly   available.                   NADF (North American Directory Forum)   The North American Directory Forum (NADF) is a collection of   organizations which offer, or plan to offer, public Directory   services in North America, based on the CCITT X.500 Recommendations.   The NADF has produced a document, NADF-175, "A Naming Scheme for   c=US", which has been issued asRFC-1255.   The NADF-175 document proposes the use of existing civil   infrastructure for naming objects under c=US.  This has the advantage   of using existing registration authorities and not establishing any   new ones (the document simply maps names assigned by existing   authorities into different portions of the c=US DIT).  The document   is intended as the basis for X.500 names in the U.S. for the long-   term; it is important that interested parties get a copy, review it,   and return comments.   A second output, which is still undergoing development, is NADF-128,   a preliminary draft on "Mapping the DIT onto Multiple ADDMDs".  This   describes how the c=US portion of the DIT is mapped onto DSAs and   what service-providers must minimally share in order to achieve a   working public directory.  The next revision of this document willESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 52]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   likely be ASCII-ized and published as an informational RFC.           NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology)   NIST is involved in several X.500 activities:  standards, pilot   deployment, and development of an X.500 implementation, Custos.  The   objective is to see X.500 widely deployed and used in the U.S.   Government.  X.500 is expected to be in the next release of the U.S.   Government OSI Profile (GOSIP).  In the standards efforts, emphasis   is on access control and replication; the other activities are   described in some detail below.   o  NIST/GSA X.500 Pilot Deployment:  NIST and GSA are      collaborating in the creation of a U.S. Government X.500 pilot      deployment.  To date, two meetings have been held.  At the      second, held on April 25th at NIST, significant progress was      made towards refining an initial draft schema developed by      NIST.  A number of government agency requirements will be      included in the next schema revision.  Once the schema is      defined, agencies will begin collecting data for loading into      the directory.  Initially, NIST will offer to host agency data      on Custos DSAs running at NIST.  Eventually, agencies are      expected to obtain and operate DSAs.   o  CUSTOS:  The NIST X.500 public-domain implementation, Custos,      is implemented on ISODE, although it otherwise bears no      relation to QUIPU.  One of its more interesting features is that      the DBMS interface is SQL, and we provide a simple DBMS as part      of Custos to support the DSA.  Information can be optionally      loaded into memory, and the memory usage is reasonably      efficient on a per-entry basis.                     OIW (OSI Implementor's Workshop)   The OSI Implementor's Workshop (OIW) is an open public forum for   technical issues, concerned with the timely development of   implementation agreements based on emerging international OSI   standards.  The Workshop accepts as input the specifications of   emerging standards for protocols, and produces as output agreements   on the implementation and testing particulars of these protocols.   This process is expected to expedite the development of OSI protocols   and to promote interoperability of independently manufactured data   communications equipment.   The Workshop organizes its work through Special Interest Groups   (SIGs) that prepare technical documentation.  The SIGs are encouraged   to coordinate with standards organizations and user groups, and to   seek widespread technical consensus on implementation agreementsESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 53]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   through international discussions and liaison activities.   The Directory SIG of the Workshop produces agreements on the   implementation of Directory protocols based on ISO 9594 and CCITT   X.500 Recommendations.  There are three major areas that the SIG is   working on for 1991:  access control, replication, and distributed   operations.   Mailing list address:      General Discussion:  dssig@nisc.sri.com      To Subscribe:        dssig-request@nisc.sri.com                             PARADISE Project   The PARADISE project is based at the Department of Computer Science,   University College London (UCL).   PARADISE is a sub-project of the broader COSINE project sponsored   under the umbrella of EUREKA by eighteen participating countries and   aimed at promoting OSI to the academic, industrial and governmental   research and development organizations in Europe.  The countries   involved are those of the EC, EFTA plus Yugoslavia; that is:   Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Holland,   Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden,   Switzerland, United Kingdom, and Yugoslavia.   The partners funded by PARADISE besides UCL are:   o  The Networks Group at the University of London Computer Centre      (ULCC), which is a service-oriented organization providing a      range of facilities to the academic community in London and the      entry point into the UK for IXI, the COSINE international X.25      backbone;   o  X-Tel Services Ltd, a software company based in Nottingham      which currently provides service support to the UK Academic      X.500 pilot; and   o  PTT Telematic Systems from the Netherlands, which in turn has      subcontracted the Swiss and Finnish PTTs, and whose involvement      is to create a forum for discussion on X.500 among the European      carrier administrations.   The project also aims to have representation from all the   participating countries, which in the majority of cases are the   existing X.500 national pilots.   Of the 18 countries involved, at least 12 are registered in the WhiteESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 54]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Pages Pilot Project.  Most countries are using the QUIPU   implementation developed at UCL.  However, a French group has   developed PIZARRO, which will form the basis of the emerging French   pilot.  In Italy, a Torino-based company Systems Wizards are using   DirWiz, which is currently the sole representative from Italy in the   tree.   Mailing list address:      helpdesk@paradise.ulcc.ac.uk                       PSI White Pages Pilot Project   The White Pages Pilot Project is the first production-quality field   test of the OSI Directory (X.500).  The pilot currently has a few   hundred organizations (more each month) and is based on OSI TP4 over   TCP/IP (RFC-1006).   Anonymous FTP site address:  (Most X.500 pilot project software is      uu.psi.com                 here as well as more information)                 ANSI ASC X3T5.4 (Directory Ad Hoc Group)   The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Accredited Standards   Committee (ASC) X3T5.4.  This group reviews the Proposed Draft   Amendments (PDAMs) for extensions to the International Consultative   Committee for Telegraphy and Telephony (CCITT) X.500   Recommendations/International Organization for Standardization   (ISO)/International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) 9594.Appendix B:  Current Activities in X.400   NOTE:  The following are edited excerpts from the IETF X.400 Services   Monthly reports as well as a few IETF scope documents.  Effort has   been taken to make sure this information is current as of February   1992.  At the end of each section are lists of anonymous FTP and/or   an e-mail address if more information is desired.                IETF OSIX400 (IETF OSI X.400 Working Group)   The IETF OSI X.400 Working Group is chartered to identify and provide   solutions for problems encountered when operating X.400 in a dual   protocol internet.  This charter includes pure X.400 operational   issues as well as X.400 <->RFC 822 gateway (alaRFC 987) issues.   Mailing list address:      General Discussion:  ietf-osi-x400@cs.wisc.edu      To Subscribe:        ietf-osi-x400-request@cs.wisc.eduESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 55]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992            IETF X400OPS (IETF X.400 Operations Working Group)   X.400 management domains are being deployed today on the Internet.   There is a need for coordination of the various efforts to insure   that they can interoperate and collectively provide an Internet-wide   X.400 message transfer service connected to the existing Internet   mail service.  The overall goal of this group is to insure   interoperability between Internet X.400 management domains and to the   existing Internet mail service.  The specific task of this group is   to produce a document that specifies the requirements and conventions   of operational Internet PRMDs.   Mailing list address:      General Discussion:  ietf-osi-x400ops@pilot.cs.wisc.edu      To Subscribe:        ietf-osi-x400ops-request@pilot.cs.wisc.edu     IETF MHS-DS (IETF Message Handling Services - Directory Services)   The MHS-DS Group works on issues relating to Message Handling Service   use of Directory Services.  The Message Handling Services are   primarily X.400, but issues relating toRFC 822 andRFC 822   interworking, in as far as use of the Directory is concerned, are in   the scope of the Group.  Directory Services means the services based   on X.500 as specified by the OSI-DS group (RFCs 1274, 1275, 1276,   1277, 1278, 1297).  The major aim of this group is to define a set of   specifications to enable effective large scale deployment of X.400.   While this Group is not directly concerned with piloting, the focus   is practical, and implementations of this work by members of the   Group is expected.   Mailing list address:      General Discussion:  mhs-ds@mercury.udev.cdc.com      To Subscribe:        mhs-ds-request@mercury.udev.cdc.com   Anonymous FTP site address:  (e-mail archive is here)      mercury.udev.cdc.com                         XNREN X.400 Pilot Project   The Internet X.400 Project at the University of Wisconsin is funded   by NSF.  We are working on two main areas:   1.  Supporting the operational use of X.400.   2.  Working with others to define organizational procedures       necessary to operate X.400 on a large scale in the Internet.   To support the use of X.400, we are operating a PRMD, assisting sites   in running PP or the Wisconsin Argo X.400 software packages, andESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 56]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   running an X.400 Message Transfer Agent (MTA) which is connected to   U.S. and international MTAs usingRFC1006/TCP/IP.  Internet sites are   invited to join our PRMD or establish X.400 connections with us.  The   organizational work is being done jointly by IETF working groups and   RARE Working Group 1.   Mailing list address:      General Discussion:  x400-project-team@cs.wisc.edu        RARE WG1 (RARE Working Group 1 - Message Handling Systems)   RARE (Reseaux Associes pour la Recherche Europeenne) Working Group 1,   Message Handling Systems, creates and promotes a European   infrastructure for a message handling service within the European   research community, with connections to the global environment.   Membership of the Working Group is by nomination from the national   networking organizations, together with a number of invited experts.      CCITT SG-D MHS-MD (CCITT Study Group D, MHS Management Domains)   This group initially pursues the  development of  the  rules for   registering MHS management Domain names within the US.  This group   also pursues developing  a set of voluntary agreements for North   American operators of these management  domains  which  will  allow   the  US  to uphold  its Telecommunications   treaty   obligations   while   the industry maintains  e-mail  as  an  Information   Processing  service.  The specific  aspect  of the treaty that is   immediate concern to this group is that subscribers of MHS  services   in  other  countries, especially  those countries who treat MHS as a   Telecommunications service, must  be  able  to reach  MHS  users  in   this  country regardless  of  how their message enters the US and   regardless of how many domains are involved in the transfer of the   message  to the intended recipient.   The US State Department presently considers MHS  (e-mail)  as  an   Information  Processing  service.  Some other countries consider any   MHS (e-mail) service  to  be  a Telecommunications  service  and   hence, CCITT treaty obligations apply.              NIST/GSA Interagency X.400 Connectivity Project   The goal of this project is to assist the members of the Federal   Information Resource Management Policy Council (FIRMPoC) in   establishing electronic mail connectivity based on X.400.  The   outcome of this project is to continue, as the National Institute of   Standards and Technology (NIST) has done in the past, providing   Federal agencies with assistance in establishing electronic mail   connectivity.  This project is sponsored by the General ServicesESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 57]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Administration (GSA).Appendix C:  How to Obtain QUIPU, PP and ISODE                              ISODE/QUIPU 7.0   This software supports the development of certain kinds of OSI   protocols and applications.  Here are the details:   o  The ISODE is not proprietary, but it is not in the public      domain.  This was necessary to include a "hold harmless"      clause in the release.  The upshot of all this is that anyone      can get a copy of the release and do anything they want with      it, but no one takes any responsibility whatsoever for any      (mis)use.   o  The ISODE runs on native Berkeley (4.2, 4.3) and AT&T System V      systems, in addition to various other UNIX-like operating      systems.  No kernel modifications are required.   o  Current modules include:      -  OSI transport service (TP0 on top of TCP, X.25 and CONS;         TP4 for SunLink OSI)      -  OSI session, presentation, and association control services      -  ASN.1 abstract syntax/transfer notation tools, including:         1.  Remote operations stub-generator (front-end for remote             operations)         2.  Structure-generator (ASN.1 to C)         3.  Element-parser (basic encoding rules)      -  OSI reliable transfer and remote operations services      -  OSI directory services      -  OSI file transfer, access and management      -  FTAM/FTP gateway      -  OSI virtual terminal (basic class, TELNET profile)   o  ISODE 7.0 consists of final "IS" level implementations with the      exception of VT which is a DIS implementation.  The ISODE alsoESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 58]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992      contains implementations of the 1984 X.400 versions of ROS and      RTS.   o  Although the ISODE is not "supported" per se, it does have a      problem reporting address, Bug-ISODE@XTEL.CO.UK.  Bug reports      (and fixes) are welcome by the way.   o  The discussion group ISODE@NISC.SRI.COM is used as an open      forum on ISODE.  Contact ISODE-Request@NISC.SRI.COM to be added      to this list.   o  The primary documentation for this release consists of a five      volume User's Manual (approx. 1000 pages) and a set of UNIX      manual pages.  The sources to the User's Manual are in LaTeX      format.  In addition, there are a number of notes, papers, and      presentations included in the documentation set, again in      either LaTeX or SLiTeX format.  If you do not have LaTeX, you      should probably get a hardcopy from one of the distribution      sites below.                      ISODE/QUIPU Distribution Sites   The FTP or FTAM distributions of ISODE-7.0 consists of 3 files.  The   source and main ISODE-7.0 distribution is in the file ISODE-7.tar.Z   which is approximately 4.7MB in size.   LaTeX source for the entire document set can be found in the ISODE-   7-doc.tar.Z file (3.5MB).  A list of documents can be found in the   doc/ directory of the source tree.   A Postscript version of the five volume manual can be found in the   ISODE-7-ps.tar.Z file (4.3MB).   If you can FTP to the Internet, then use anonymous FTP to uu.psi.com   [136.161.128.3] to retrieve the files in BINARY mode from the ISODE/   directory.                 Additional PSI White Pages Pilot Software   The 'usconfig' program configures a DSA which understands some of the   NADF naming rules.  This software is primarily intended for creating   directory hierarchies for DSAs from scratch.  The add-on software is   available via anonymous FTP from uu.psi.com in:      wp/src/wpp-addon.tar.Z   Whether you choose to use 'usconfig' or not, please retrieve and   install the addon, and follow the instructions therein. You mightESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 59]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   want to retrieve pilot-ps.tar.Z again also, as it contains an updated   Administrator Guide.   Note that the wpp-addon.tar.Z file needs to be installed on top of   the ISODE 7.0 distribution; it does not duplicate any of the ISODE   7.0, you need to retrieve and generate that too.                                  PP 6.0   PP is a Message Transfer Agent, intended for high volume message   switching, protocol conversion, and format conversion.  It is   targeted for use in an operational environment, but is also be useful   for investigating message related applications.  Good management   features are a major aspect of this system.  PP supports the 1984 and   1988 versions of the CCITT X.400 / ISO 10021 services and protocols.   Many existingRFC-822 based protocols are supported, along with RFC-   1148bis conversion to X.400.  PP is an appropriate replacement for   MMDF or Sendmail.  This is the second public release of PP, and   includes substantial changes based on feedback from using PP on many   sites.   o  PP is not proprietary and can be used for any purpose.  The only      restriction is that suing of the authors for any damage the      code may cause is not allowed.   o  PP runs on a range of UNIX and UNIX-like operating systems,      including SUNOS, Ultrix, and BSD.  A full list of platforms on      which PP is know to run is included in the distribution.   o  Current modules include:      -  X.400 (1984) P1 protocol.      -  X.400 (1988) P1 protocol.      -  Simple mail transfer protocol (SMTP), conformant to host         requirements.      -  JNT mail (grey book) Protocol.      -  UUCP mail transfer.      -  DECNET Mail-11 transfer      -  Distribution list expansion and maintenance, using either a         file based mechanism or an X.500 directory.      -RFC 822-based local delivery.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 60]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992      -  Delivery time processing of messages.      -  Conversion between X.400 andRFC-822 according to the latest         revision ofRFC-1148, known as RFC-1148bis.      -  Conversion support for reformatting body parts and headers.      -  X-Window and line-based management console.      -  Message Authorization checking.      -  Reformatting support for "mail hub" operation.      -  X.500-based distribution list facility using the QUIPU         directory.      -  FAX interworking   o  No User Agents (UAs) are included with PP.  However, procedural      access to the MTA is documented, to encourage others to write      or to port UAs.  Several existing UAs, such as MH, may be used      with PP.   o  It is expected that a Message Store to be used in conjunction      with PP (PPMS), and an associated X-Windows User Agent (XUA)      will be released on beta test in first quarter 92.   o  The core routing of PP 6.0 is table based.  DNS is used by the      SMTP channel.  The next version of PP will support Directory      Based routing, which may use X.500 or DNS.   o  PP 6.0 requires ISODE 7.0.   o  X-Windows release X11R4 (or greater) is needed by some of the      management tools.  PP can be operated without these tools.   o  Although PP is not "supported" per se (but see later), it does      have a problem reporting address (bug reports (and fixes) are      welcome):RFC-822:  PP-SUPPORT@CS.UCL.AC.UK      X.400:    S=PP-Support; OU=CS; O=UCL;                PRMD=UK.AC; ADMD= ; C=GB;   o  The discussion group PP-PEOPLE@CS.UCL.AC.UK is used as an open      forum on PP; Contact PP-PEOPLE-REQUEST@CS.UCL.AC.UK to be added      to this list.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 61]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   o  The primary documentation for this release consists of a three      and a half volume User's Manual (approx. 300 pages) and a set      of UNIX manual pages.  The sources to the User's Manual are in      LaTeX format.                           PP Distribution Sites   If you can FTP to the Internet from outside Europe, then use   anonymous FTP to uu.psi.com [136.161.128.3] to retrieve the file pp-   6.tar.Z in binary mode from the ISODE/ directory.  This file is the   tar image after being run through the compress program and is   approximately 3Mb in size.   If you can FTP to the Internet from Europe, then use anonymous FTP to   archive.eu.net [192.16.202.1] to retrieve the file pp-6.tar.Z in   binary mode from the network/ISODE/ directory.  This file is the tar   image after being run through the compress program and is   approximately 3Mb in size.             ISODE/QUIPU and PP Platforms as of December 1991   Machine          OS                       ISODE  PP   Stacks  Notes   ====================================================================   CCUR 6000        RTU 5.0                  7.0    Yes! TCP     1   --------------------------------------------------------------------   CCUR 6000        RTU 6.0                  7.0    Yes! TCP     2                                                         X25                                                         CLNS   --------------------------------------------------------------------   CDC 4000 Series  EP/IX 1.3.2              6.6+        TCP     3                    EP/IX 1.4.1                          CLNS                                                         X25   --------------------------------------------------------------------   COMPAQ 386/25    SCO Unix 5.2             6.0         TCP   --------------------------------------------------------------------   COMPAQ 386       BSD                      7.0         TCP     4                                                         X25   --------------------------------------------------------------------   Convex C120      ConvexOS 8.1             7.0         TCP     5   --------------------------------------------------------------------   DEC Vax          2nd Berkeley Network rel 7.0         TCP                                                         X25   --------------------------------------------------------------------   DEC              DECnet-ULTRIX V5.0       7.0         TCP     6                                                         CLNS   --------------------------------------------------------------------   DEC              Ultrix 3.1D              7.0    5.2  TCP     7                    Ultrix 4.0                           X25ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 62]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992                    Ultrix 4.1   --------------------------------------------------------------------   DEC              Ultrix 4.2               7.0        TCP                                                        X25                                                        CLNS   --------------------------------------------------------------------   DEC              VMS v5.x                 7.0        TCP                                                        X25   --------------------------------------------------------------------   DG Avion         DGUX 4.30                7.0        TCP      8   --------------------------------------------------------------------   Encore Multimax 3xx UMAX V 2.2h           6.0        TCP      9   Encore Multimax 5xx   --------------------------------------------------------------------   Encore NP1       UTX/32 3.1a              7.0        TCP      10                                                        X25   --------------------------------------------------------------------   Encore PN6000    UTX/32 2.1b              6.0        TCP      9   Encore PN9000                                        X25   --------------------------------------------------------------------   HP/9000/3xx      HP/UX 6.0                7.0        TCP      11                    HP-UX 7.05 B   --------------------------------------------------------------------   HP/9000/8xx      HP-UX 7.00               7.0        TCP      11                                                        X25   --------------------------------------------------------------------   IBM 3090         AIX/370 1.2.1            7.0        TCP      12   --------------------------------------------------------------------   IBM PS/2         AIX 1.2.1                6.7        TCP      13   --------------------------------------------------------------------   IBM RS/6000      AIX 3.1                  6.8        TCP                    AIX 3.0   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ICL              DRS/6000                 7.0    5.2 TCP      14   --------------------------------------------------------------------   Macintosh        A/UX 2.0.1               7.0        TCP   --------------------------------------------------------------------   Macintosh        MacOS V6.x               6.0        TCP      15   --------------------------------------------------------------------   Mips 4-52        ATT-V3-0                 7.0    5.2 TCP      16   --------------------------------------------------------------------   NeXT                                      7.0    5.2 TCP      17   --------------------------------------------------------------------   ORION/Clipper                             6.8        TCP   --------------------------------------------------------------------   Olivetti LSX-3020 X/OS 2.1                6.7b   5.0 TCP      1                                                        X25   --------------------------------------------------------------------ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 63]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Pyramid 9800     OSx 5.1 (4.3BSD/SVR3.2)  7.0    5.2 TCP      18   Pyramid MIS   --------------------------------------------------------------------   SEQUENT          DYNIX V3.0.18            7.0        TCP      8   --------------------------------------------------------------------   Sony News-1750   NEWS-OS 3.3              6.8        TCP                    NEWS-OS 4.0c   --------------------------------------------------------------------   Sun4             SunOS 4.1                7.0    5.2 TCP   Sun3             SunOS 4.1.1                         X25                    SunOS 4.0.3c                        CONS                                                        CLNS   --------------------------------------------------------------------   Notes:   1.  NOT SNMP or VT   2.  Little tested   3.  Official upper layer   4.  Prototype only!   5.  Planned port   6.  Being worked on!   7.  3.1D binaries compiled under 4.2   8.  Only QUIPU confirmed   9.  Not QUIPU   10.  Need "-Dregister=" in CONFIG.make   11.  Need bug-fix no. 5 from bug-ISODE@xtel.co.uk. not SNMP,VT or        FTAM-FTP gateway   12.  No VT, QUIPU not tested   13.  Models 80 and 95   14.  NOT SNMP or VT,PP and X.25 requires patches available from        X-Tel   15.  Using MacTCPESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 64]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   16.  Only QUIPU tested, built using BSD43 config   17.  Need bug-fix no. 6 from bug-ISODE@xtel.co.uk   18.  Built using BSD config, no VT or SNMP   The above tables do not refer to beta releases of ISODE  and PP more   recent than the public ISODE-7.0 or PP-5.2 releases.  The above table   is generated from reports sent to bug-ISODE and pp-support.  There is   no guarantee the information is correct.Appendix D:  Sample X.500 Input File and Restricted Character List   Below is a sample datafile that illustrates the format for providing   data about persons at your site to be loaded into the ESnet DSA.   Following the sample datafile is a detailed explanation of the format   and content of the file.  We have tried to be as flexible as possible   in defining the format of the file, given the constraints imposed by   an automated process.  We would appreciate feedback on the format of   the file and will try to accommodate any specific needs you may have   to any extent that is reasonable.   #   #        Sample Data File for Bulk Loading X.500 Database   #   # delimiter character is ","                                        1   # field 1 is commonName                                             2   # field 2 is phone extension                                        3   #   area code for all numbers is 510                                4   #   prefix for all numbers is 422                                   5   # field 3 is rfc822Mailbox                                          6   # field 4 is facsimileTelephoneNumber                               7   # default facsimileTelephoneNumber is (510) 422-3333                8   # postalAddress for all entries is:                                 9   #     National Energy Research Supercomputer Center                10   #     P.O. Box 5509                                                11   #     Livermore, California 94552                                  12   #   Chris Anderson,1915,anderson@ws1.nersc.gov,                        13   Lila Brown,5680,brownl@ws2.nersc.gov,                              14   Bob Green,4474,,                                                   15   Max Jones,4488,elvis@presley.nersc.gov,5104224444                  16   Dave Smith,9818,smithd@ws3.nersc.gov,                              17   Cathy White,4016,snow@white.nersc.gov,                             18   <end-of-file>   Comment lines at the beginning of the file convey relevant formatting   information.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 65]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Following comment lines, each data line contains information about   one person.   Fields within a single data line are separated by a delimiter   character.  You specify the delimiter character you wish to use in   the comment section; be sure to choose a delimiter which does not   appear as a legitimate character in any field of a data line.   You may provide all or part of the attribute types listed in the   table inSection 2.5 (commonName is required).  In the comment   section, you must indicate which attribute types are contained in   each field of a data line.   Each data line must contain the same number of fields and the same   order of fields (i.e. same order of attribute types).  Two successive   delimiters indicated a null value (eof is a considered a field   delimiter).   The characters "=", "&", "$", and "#" are NEVER allowed in any   attribute value.   Below is a discussion of relevant lines of the sample datafile.   Line 1      The delimiter character is identified as a comma (,).   Line 2      Field # 1 is identified as containing the commonName                 attribute.   Line 3      Field # 2 is identified as containing the telephoneNumber                 attribute.  The actual data value is a 4-digit                 extension.   Lines 4,5   Identify the area code and prefix which apply to all                 4-digit extensions in the datafile.  If your actual                 data values already contain area code and/or prefix,                 then there would be no need to indicate default values.   Line 6      Field # 3 is identified as containing the rfc822Mailbox                 attribute.   Line 7      Field # 4 is identified as containing the                 facsimileTelephoneNumber attribute.   Line 8      Identifies the default value for                 facsimileTelephoneNumber.  If field 4 is missing in a                 data line, the default value will be applied.   Lines 9-12  Identify the value of the postalAddress attribute whichESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 66]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992                 applies to all entries.   Line 13  commonName= Chris Anderson            surName= Anderson            telephoneNumber= 510-422-1915            rfc822MailBox= anderson@ws1.nersc.gov            facsimileTelephoneNumber= 510-422-3333            postalAddress= National Energy Research Supercomputer Center                           P.O. Box 5509                           Livermore, California 94552   Line 14  commonName= Lila Brown            surName= Brown            telephoneNumber= 510-422-5680            rfc822MailBox= brownl@ws2.nersc.gov            facsimileTelephoneNumber= 510-422-3333            postalAddress= National Energy Research Supercomputer Center                           P.O. Box 5509                           Livermore, California 94552   Line 15  commonName= Bob Green            surName= Green            telephoneNumber= 510-422-4474            rfc822MailBox=            facsimileTelephoneNumber= 510-422-3333            postalAddress= National Energy Research Supercomputer Center                           P.O. Box 5509                           Livermore, California 94552   Line 16  commonName= Max Jones            surName= Jones            telephoneNumber= 510-422-4488            rfc822MailBox= elvis@presley.nersc.gov            facsimileTelephoneNumber= 510-422-4444            postalAddress= National Energy Research Supercomputer Center                           P.O. Box 5509                           Livermore, California 94552   Line 17  commonName= Dave Smith            surName= Smith            telephoneNumber= 510-422-9818            rfc822MailBox= smithd@ws3.nersc.gov            facsimileTelephoneNumber= 510-422-3333            postalAddress= National Energy Research Supercomputer Center                           P.O. Box 5509                           Livermore, California 94552ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 67]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Line 18  commonName= Cathy White            surName= White            telephoneNumber= 510-422-4016            rfc822MailBox= snow@white.nersc.gov            facsimileTelephoneNumber= 510-422-3333            postalAddress= National Energy Research Supercomputer Center                           P.O. Box 5509                           Livermore, California 94552Appendix E:  ESnet Backbone Sites                            Government Agencies   U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Energy Research (DOE)   Germantown, Maryland   USA   U.S. Department of Energy, San Francisco Office (SAN)   Oakland, California   USA                           National Laboratories   NASA Ames Research Center (AMES, FIX-WEST)   Mountain View, California   USA   Argonne National Laboratory (ANL)   Argonne, Illinois   USA   Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)   Upton, New York   USA   Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF)   Newport News, Virginia   USA   Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (FNAL)   Batavia, Illinois   USA   Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (LBL)   Berkeley, California   USA   Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL)   Livermore, California   USA   Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL)   Los Alamos, New Mexico   USA   Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL)   Oak Ridge, Tennessee   USAESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 68]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL)   Richland, Washington   USA   Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL)   Princeton, New Jersey   USA   Sandia National Laboratory, Albuquerque (SNLA)   Albuquerque, New Mexico   USA   Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC)   Menlo Park, California   USA   Superconducting Super Collider (SSC)   Dallas, Texas   USA                               Universities   California Institute of Technology (CIT)   Pasadena, California   USA   Florida State University (FSU)   Tallahassee, Florida   USA   Iowa State University (ISU)   Ames, Iowa   USA   Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)   Cambridge, Massachusetts   USA   New York University (NYU)   Upton, New York   USA   Oak Ridge Associated Universities (ORAU)   Oak Ridge, Tennessee   USA   University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)   Westwood, California   USA   University of Maryland (UMD, FIX-EAST)   College Park, Maryland   USA   University of Texas, Austin (UTA)   Austin, Texas   USA                            Commercial Entities   General Atomics (GA)   San Diego, California   USAESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 69]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Office of Science and Technology Information (OSTI)   Oak Ridge, Tennessee   USA   Science Applications, Incorporated (SAIC)   McLean, Virginia   USAAppendix F:  Local Site Contacts for DOE Naming Authorities   Below is a list of all Department of Energy GOSIP Site Authorities   for OSI registration and addressing.  This information was obtained   from the DoE GOSIP On-Line Information System (DOE-GOIS), dated   November 18, 1991.   Marian F. Sotel   Director, Information management Division   U.S. Department of Energy   DOE Field Office, Albuquerque   Dennis Jensen   Ames Laboratory   258H Development   Ames, IA 50011-3020   (515) 294-7909   Linda Winkler   Argonne National Laboratory   Argonne, IL 60439   (708) 972-7236   R. E. Kremer   Manager, Resource Automation   U.S. Department of Energy   Bettis Atomic Power laboratory   Gary Ragsdale   Manager, Information Services   U.S. Department of Energy   Bonneville Power Administration   905 NE 11th Avenue   Portland, OR 97232   Wayne Larson   Head of Data Communications Unit   U.S. Department of Energy   Bonneville Power Administration   905 NE 11th Avenue   Portland, OR 97232ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 70]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   George Rabinowitz   Head Distributed Computing Section   Brookhaven National Laboratory   Upton, New York 11973   (516) 282-7637   Donna A. Dyxin   Communications Specialist   U.S. Department of Energy   DOE Field Office, Chicago   9800 South Cass Avenue   Argonne, IL 60439   Elaine R. Liebrecht   System Manager and Planning Supervisor   EG&G Mound Applied Technologies   P.O. Box 3000   Miamisburg, OH 45343-3000   (FTS) 774-3733 or (513) 865-3733   Jeffrey J. Johnson   Communications Supervisor   EG&G Mound Applied Technologies   P.O. Box 3000   Miamisburg, OH 45343-3000   (FTS) 774-4230 or (513) 865-4230   Paul P. Herr   U.S. Department of Energy   Energy Information Agency   (202) 586-7318   William H. Foster   U.S. Department of Energy   Energy Information Agency   (202) 586-6310   Mark O. Kaletka   Data Communications Group Leader, Computing Div.   Fermi National Accelerator Lab   P.O. Box 500   Batavia, IL 60510   (708) 840-2965   David A. Mackler   Grand Junction Project Office   (FTS) 326-6412ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 71]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Wayne L. Selfors   Grand Junction Project Office   (FTS) 326-6525   Gerald F. Chappell   Director, ITSO   U.S. Department of Energy   Headquarters   Washington D.C., 20545   (FTS) 233-3685 or (301) 903-3685   Joe Diel   Supervisor, Biomathematics Group   ITRI   David H. Robinson   Section Supervisor, Information Systems   Allied-Signal Aerospace Company   Kansas City Division   P.O. Box 419159   Kansas City, MO 64141-6159   (FTS) 997-3690 or (816) 997-3690   Robert M. Jensen   Supervisory Engineer, Information Systems   Allied-Signal Aerospace Company   Kansas City Division   P.O. Box 419159   Kansas City, MO 64141-6159   (FTS) 997-5538 or (816) 997-5538   Russell Wright   Lawrence Berkeley Laboratories   1 Cyclotron Road   Berkeley, CA 94720   (510) 486-6965   William A. Lokke   Associate Director for Computation   Lawrence Livermore National Lab   (FTS) 532-9870 or (669) 422-9870   Philip Wood/Glenn Michel   Los Alamos National Laboratory   Los Alamos, NM 87545   (FTS) 843-1845 or (FTS) 843-2598ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 72]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Robert Bruen   MIT Laboratory for Nuclear Science   Computer Facilities Manager   Massachusetts Institute of Tech.   Cambridge, MA   Mark Cerullo   Morgantown Energy Technology Center   (FTS) 923-4345   Hank Latham   NVRSN   (FTS) 575-7646   Bill Morrison   Network Specialist   Bechtel Petroleum Operations, Inc   Naval Petroleum Reserves California   P.O. Box 127   Tupman, CA 93276   (FTS) 797-6933 or (805) 763-6933   Mary Ann Jones   DOE Field Office, Nevada   Bill Freberg   Computer Sciences Corporation   DOE Field Office, Nevada   Roger Hardwick   Project Director   Roy F. Weston   OCRWM   3885 S. Decatur Blvd.   Las Vegas, NV 89103   (702) 873-6200   John Gandi   U.S. Department of Energy   OCRWM   101 Convention Ctr   Phase II Complex, Suite 202   Las Vegas, NV 89109   (702) 794-7954   Benny Goodman   U.S. Department of Energy   OSTIESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 73]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Raymond F. Cook   U.S. Department of Energy   OSTI   D. M. Turnpin   Martin Marietta Energy Systems, Inc   Oak Ridge   P.O. Box 2009   Oak Ridge, TN 37831-8227   (FTS) 626-8848 or (615) 576-8848   T. E. Birchfield   Supervisor, Electronic Informations Delivery Sect.   Martin Marietta Energy Systems, Inc   Oak Ridge   P.O. Box 2008   Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6283   (FTS) 624-4635 or (615) 574-4635   Bobby Brumley   TRESP Associates   DOE Field Office, Oak Ridge   Mike Letterman   TRESP Associates   DOE Field Office, Oak Ridge   S. Dean Carpenter   Department Head, Communications   Mason and Hanger   Pantex Plant   Wayne C. Phillips   Section Head, Internal Communications   Mason and Hanger   Pantex Plant   A. J. Lelekacs   Sr. Networking Engineer   General Electric   Pinellas Plant   P.O. Box 2908   Neutron Devices Department   Largo, FL 34649-2908ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 74]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Paul A. Funk   Site Access Coordinator   Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory   P.O. Box 451   Princeton, NJ 08543   (609) 243-3403   John Murphy   Branch Chief, Information and Communication Mgmt   U.S. Department of Energy   DOE Field Office, Richland   P.O. Box 550   Richland, WA 99352   (FTS) 444-7543 or (509) 376-7543   Mike Schmidt   Telecom & Network Services IRM   Westinghouse Hanford Company   DOE Field Office, Richland   P.O. Box 1970   Richland, WA 99352   (FTS) 444-7739 or (509) 376-7739   Dwayne Ramsey   Information Resources Management Division   U.S. Department of Energy   DOE Field Office, San Francisco   (FTS) 536-4302   W. F. Mason   Central Computing Systems Manager   Sandia National Laboratories - AL   P.O. Box 5800   Albuquerque, NM 87185   (FTS) 845-8059 or (505) 845-8059   Harry R. Holden   U.S. Department of Energy   DOE Field Office, Savannah River   P.O. Box A   Aiken, SC 29802   (FTS) 239-1118 or (803) 725-1118ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 75]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Reggie Peagler   Network Security Officer   Savannah River Site   Building 773-51A   Aiken, SC 29808   (FTS) 239-3418 or (803) 557-3418   Wade A. Gaines   Acting ADP Manager   U.S. Department of Energy   Southeastern Power Administration   Samuel Elbert Building   Elberton, GA 30635   Paul Richard   Southwestern Power Administration   (FTS) 745-7482   Dr. R. Les Cottrell   Assistant Director, SLAC Computer Services   Stanford Linear Accelerator Center   P.O. Box 4349   Stanford, CA 94309   John Lucero   Systems Analyst, Management Systems   Westinghouse Electric Corporation   Waste Isolation Pilot Plant   P.O. Box 2078   Carlsbad, NM 88221   (FTS) 571-8459 or (505) 887-8459   Lawrence Bluhm   Sr. Systems Analyst, Management Systems   Westinghouse Electric Corporation   Waste Isolation Pilot Plant   P.O. Box 2078   Carlsbad, NM 88221   (FTS) 571-8459 or (505) 887-8459   Ben Sandoval   Western Area Power Administration   (FTS) 327-7470   John Sewell   Western Area Power Administration   (FTS) 327-7407ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 76]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992Appendix G:  Recommended Reading                        RFCs (Request For Comments)   The following RFCs may be obtained from the ESnet Information Server.   They are stored in the directory [ANONYMOUS.RFCS].  They may be   retrieved via anonymous FTP (nic.es.net, 128.55.32.3) or DECnet copy   (ESNIC::, 41.174).RFC1328  X.400 1988 to 1984 downgrading.  Hardcastle-Kille, S.E.  1992     May; 5 p. (Format: TXT=10006 bytes)RFC1327  Mapping Between X.400 (1988) /ISO 10021 andRFC 822.     Hardcastle-Kille, S.E.  1992 May; 113 p. (Format: TXT=228598 bytes)RFC1309  Technical overview of directory services using the X.500     protocol.  Weider, C.; Reynolds, J.K.; Heker, S.  1992 March; 4 p.     (Format: TXT=35694 bytes)RFC1308  Executive Introduction to Directory Services Using the X.500     Protocol.  Weider, C.; Reynolds, J.K.  1992 March; 4 p. (Format:     TXT=9392 bytes)RFC1295  North American Directory Forum.  User bill of rights for     entries and listing in the public directory.  1992 January; 2 p.     (Format: TXT=3502 bytes)RFC1292  Lang, R.; Wright, R.  Catalog of Available X.500     Implementations. 1991 December; 103 p. (Format: TXT=129468 bytes)RFC1279  Hardcastle-Kille, S.E.  X.500 and domains.  1991 November; 13     p. (Format: TXT=26669, PS=170029 bytes)RFC1278  Hardcastle-Kille, S.E.  String encoding of presentation     address. 1991 November; 5 p. (Format: TXT=10256, PS=128696 bytes)RFC1277  Hardcastle-Kille, S.E.  Encoding network addresses to support     operations over non-OSI lower layers.  1991 November; 10 p.     (Format: TXT=22254, PS=176169 bytes)RFC1276  Hardcastle-Kille, S.E.  Replication and distributed operations     extensions to provide an Internet directory using X.500. 1991     November; 17 p. (Format: TXT=33731, PS=217170 bytes)RFC1275  Hardcastle-Kille, S.E.  Replication requirements to provide an     Internet directory using X.500.  1991 November; 2 p. (Format:     TXT=4616, PS=83736 bytes)ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 77]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992RFC1274  Kille, S.E.; Barker, P.  COSINE and Internet X.500 schema. 1991     November; 60 p. (Format: TXT=92827 bytes)RFC1255  North American Directory Forum.  Naming scheme for c=US. 1991     September; 25 p. (Format: TXT=53783 bytes)  (ObsoletesRFC 1218)RFC1249  Howes, T.; Smith, M.; Beecher, B.  DIXIE protocol     specification.  1991 August; 10 p. (Format: TXT=20693 bytes)RFC1202  Rose, M.T.  Directory Assistance service.  1991 February; 11 p.     (Format: TXT=21645 bytes)RFC1006  Rose, M.T.; Cass, D.E.  ISO transport services on top of the     TCP: Version 3.  1987 May; 17 p. (Format: TXT=31935 bytes)                         Non Published Working Notes"A String Representation of Distinguished Names", S.E. Hardcastle-Kille,     01/30/1992.     The OSI Directory uses distinguished names as the primary keys to     entries in the directory.  Distinguished Names are encoded in     ASN.1. When a distinguished name is communicated between to users     not using a directory protocol (e.g., in a mail message), there is     a need to have a user-oriented string representation of     distinguished name."An Access Control Approach for Searching and Listing", S.E.     Hardcastle-Kille, T. Howes, 09/23/1991.     This memo defines an extended ACL (Access Control List) mechanism     for the OSI Directory.  It is intended to meet strong operational     requirements to restrict searching and listing externally, while     allowing much more freedom within an organization.  In particular,     this mechanism makes it possible to restrict searches to certain     sets of attributes, and to prevent "trawling": the disclosure of     large organizational data or structure information by repeated     searches or lists. This capability is necessary for organizations     that want to hide their internal structure, or to prevent dumping     of their entire database.  This memo describes functionality     beyond, but compatible with, that expected in the 1992 X.500     standard."Building an Internet Directory using X.500", S. Kille, 01/07/1991.     The IETF has established a Working Group on OSI Directory Services.     A major component of the initial work of this group is to establish     a technical framework for establishing a Directory Service on theESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 78]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992     Internet, making use of the X.500 protocols and services.  This     document summarizes the strategy established by the Working Group,     and describes a number of RFCs which will be written in order to     establish the technical framework."Directory Requirements for COSINE and Internet Pilots (OSI-DS 18)",     S.E. Hardcastle-Kille, 07/09/1991.     This document specifies operational requirements for DUAs and DSAs     in the Internet and COSINE communities.  This document summarizes     conformance requirements.  In most cases, technical detail is     handled by reference to other documents.  This document refers to     core directory infrastructure. Each application using the directory     may impose additional requirements."DSA Naming", S.E. Hardcastle-Kille, 01/24/1992.     This document describes a few problems with DSA Naming as currently     deployed in pilot exercises, and suggests a new approach.  This     approach is suggested for use in the Internet Directory Pilot,     which overcomes a number of existing problems, and is an important     component for the next stage in increase of scale."Handling QOS (Quality of service) in the Directory", S.E. Kille,     08/29/1991.     This document describes a mechanism for specifying the Quality of     Service for DSA Operations and Data in the Internet Pilot Directory     Service "Building and internet directory using X.500"."Interim Directory Tree Structure for Network Infrastructure     Information", Chris Weider, Mark Knopper, Ruth Lang, 06/14/1991.     As work progresses on incorporating WHOIS and Network     Infrastructure information into X.500, we thought it would be     useful to document the current DIT structure for this information,     along with some thoughts on future expansion and organization of     this subtree of the DIT. The first section of this document     describes the current structure, the second section the possible     expansion of the structure."Interim Schema for Network Infrastructure Information in X.500 New     name:  Encoding Network Addresses to support operation ov", Chris     Weider, Mark Knopper, 06/14/1991.     As the OSI Directory progresses into an operational structure which     is being increasingly used as a primary resource for Directory     Information, it was perceived that having the Internet SiteESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 79]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992     Contacts and some limited network information in the Directory     would be immediately useful and would also provide the preliminary     framework for some distributed NIC functions. This paper describes     the interim schema used to contain this information."Naming Guidelines for Directory Pilots", P. Barker, S.E. Kille,     01/30/1992.     Deployment of a Directory will benefit from following certain     guidelines. This document defines a number of naming guidelines.     Alignment to these guidelines will be recommended for national     pilots."OSI NSAP Address Format For Use In The Internet", R Colella, R Callon,     02/13/1991.     The Internet is moving towards a multi-protocol environment that     includes OSI. To support OSI, it is necessary to address network     layer entities and network service users.  The basic principles of     OSI Network Layer addressing and Network Service Access Points     (NSAPs) are defined in Addendum 2 to the OSI Network service     definition.  This document recommends a structure for the Domain     Specific Part of NSAP addresses for use in the Internet that is     consistent with these principles."Representing Public Archives in the Directory", Wengyik Yeong,     12/04/1991.     The proliferation of publicly accessible archives in the Internet     has created an ever-widening gap between the fact of the existence     of such archives, and knowledge about the existence and contents of     these archives in the user community. Related to this problem is     the problem of also providing users with the necessary information     on the mechanisms available to retrieve such archives.  In order     for the Internet user community to better avail themselves of this     class of resources, there is a need for these gaps in knowledge to     be bridged."Schema for Information Resource Description in X.500", Chris Weider,     06/14/1991.     The authors are interested in allowing distributed access and     updating for Information Resource Description information to users     of the Internet. This paper discusses the schema used to hold the     Information Resource Description information.  The new attributes     are taken from the US-MARC fields, and subfields, with the mapping     described in the text.ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 80]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992"Schema for NIC Profile Information in X.500", Chris Weider, Mark     Knopper, 06/14/1991.     The authors of this document, in conjunction with the chairs of the     IETF Network Information Services Infrastructure (NISI) group,     would like to implement a Directory of Network Information Centers,     or NICs.  This will enable NICs to find each other easily, will     allow users with access to a DSA to find out where NICs are, and     will in general facilitate the distribution of information about     the Internet and some of its infrastructure.  This document     proposes a set of standard schema for this information."Using the OSI Directory to Achieve User Friendly Naming", S. Kille,     01/30/1992.     The OSI Directory has user friendly naming as a goal.  A simple     minded usage of the directory does not achieve this.  Two aspects     not achieved are:  1)  A user oriented notation  and  2)     Guessability. This proposal sets out some conventions for     representing names in a friendly manner, and shows how this can be     used to achieve really friendly naming.  This then leads to a     specification of a standard format for representing names, and to     procedures to resolve them. This leads to a specification which     allows directory names to be communicated between humans.  The     format in this specification is identical to that defined in the     reference of "A String Representation of Distinguished Name", and     it is intended that these specifications are compatible."Requirements for X.400 Management Domains (MDs) Operating in the Global     Research and Development X.400 Service", R. Hagens, 11/12/1991.     This  document  specifies  a  set  of  minimal   operational     requirements that  must  be  implemented  by all Management Domains     (MDs) in the Global R&D X.400 Service.   This  document  defines     the  core  operational requirements; in some cases, technical     detail is handled  by  reference  to other documents.  The Global     R&D X.400 Service is defined as all organizations which meet the     requirements described in this document."Routing Coordination for X.400 MHS Services within a     Multiprotocol/Multinetwork Environment", U. Eppenberger,     10/25/1992.     The X.400 addresses do start to appear on business cards. The     different MHS service providers are not well interconnected and     coordinated which makes it a very hard job for the MHS managers to     know where to route all the new addresses. A big number of X.400     implementations support different lower layer stacks. Taking intoESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 81]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992     account the variety of existing large transport networks, there is     now the chance of implementing a worldwide message handling service     using the same electronic mail standard and therefore without the     need of gateways with service reduction and without the restriction     to a single common transport network. This document proposes how     messages can travel over different networks by using multi stack     MTAs as relays. Document formats and coordination procedures bridge     the gap until an X.500 directory service is ready to store the     needed connectivity and routing information.                      International Standards DocumentsInternational Consultative Committee for Telephone and Telegraph. Open     Systems Interconnection - The Directory. X.500 Series     Recommendations.  December, 1988.     (also published as)ISO/IEC. Information Technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The     Directory. International Standard 9594. 1989.International Consultative Committee for Telephone and Telegraph. Data     Communication Networks - Message Handling Systems. X.400 Series     Recommendations. Geneva 1985.International Consultative Committee for Telephone and Telegraph. Data     Communication Networks - Message Handling Systems. X.400 Series     Recommendations. Melbourne, 1988.                               NIST Documents         (National Institute of Standards and Technology Documents)   The following documents can be retrieved from the ESnet Information   Server in directory [ANONYMOUS.NIST].Government Open Systems Interconnection Profile (GOSIP) Version 1,     National Institute of Standards and Technology, Federal Information     Processing Standards Publication #146, August, 1988.Government Open Systems Interconnection Profile (GOSIP) Version 2,     National Institute of Standards and Technology, October, 1990.                                DOE Documents   The following documents prepared by the DOE GOSIP Migration Working   Group can be retrieved from the ESnet Information Server in directory   [ANONYMOUS.DOE-GOSIP].ESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 82]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992U.S. Department of Energy. Government Open Systems Interconnection     Profile.  Transition Strategy. DOE GOSIP Document # GW-ST-008.     November, 1990.U.S. Department of Energy. Government Open Systems Interconnection     Profile.  Transition Plan. DOE GOSIP Document # GW_PN_005.     November, 1990.U.S. Department of Energy. Government Open Systems Interconnection     Profile.  Procedures and Guidelines. DOE GOSIP Document # GW-PR-     007. April, 1991.                             IETF Working Groups   Three IETF working groups, OSI X.400, OSI-DS and MHS-DS have been   working in in X.400 and X.500. Minutes of meetings, descriptions of   the working groups' charters and goals, information about mailing   lists, and other pertinent documents can be retrieved from the ESnet   Information Server in the directories [ANONYMOUS.IETF.OSIDS],   [ANONYMOUS.IETF.OSIX400] and [ANONYMOUS.IETF.MHSMS].                                  OthersMarshall T. Rose, Julian P. Onions and Colin J. Robbins. The ISO     Development Environment: User's Manual, 1991.  ISODE Documentation     Set.Marshall T. Rose and Wengyik Yeong.  PSI White Pages Pilot Project:     Administrator's Guide, 1991.  ISODE Documentation Set.Marshall T. Rose.  The Open Book: A Practical Perspective on Open     Systems Interconnection. Prentice-hall, 1990. ISBN 0-13-643016-3.Marshall T. Rose.  The Little Black Book: Mail Bonding with OSI     Directory Services. Prentice-hall, 1991. ISBN 0-13-683219-5.Alan Turner and Paul Gjefle, Pacfic Northwest Laboratory.  Performance     Analysis of an OSI X.500 (QUIPU) Directory Service Implmentation.     1992. Available on nic.es.net in the directory [ANONYMOUS.ESNET-     DOC]QUIPU-PERF.PSAppendix H:  Task Force Member Information   Bob Aiken     U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Energy Research, Scientific     Computing Staff (now with National Science Foundation)     Email:  raiken@nsf.govESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 83]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Joe Carlson     Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory     Livermore, California USA     Email:  carlson@lll-winken.llnl.gov   Les Cottrell     Stanford Linear Accelerator Center     Menlo Park, California USA     Email:  cottrell@slacvm.slac.stanford.edu   Tim Doody     Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory     Batavia, Illinois USA     Email:  doody@fndcd.fnal.gov   Tony Genovese  (Contributing Author)     Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory     Livermore, California USA     Email:  genovese@es.net   Arlene Getchell  (Contributing Author)     Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory     Livermore, California USA     Email:  getchell@es.net   Charles Granieri     Stanford Linear Accelerator Center     Menlo Park, California USA     Email:  cxg@slacvm.slac.stanford.edu   Kipp Kippenhan  (Contributing Author)     Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory     Batavia, Illinois USA     Email:  kippenhan@fnal.fnal.gov   Connie Logg     Stanford Linear Accelerator Center     Menlo Park, California USA     Email:  cal@slacvm.slac.stanford.edu   Glenn Michel     Los Alamos National Laboratory     Los Alamos, New Mexico USA     Email:  gym@lanl.gov   Peter Mierswa     Digital Equipment Corporation USAESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 84]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Jean-Noel Moyne     Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory     Berkeley, California USA     Email:  jnmoyne@lbl.gov   Kevin Oberman  (Contributing Author)     Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory     Livermore, California USA     Email:  oberman@icdc.llnl.gov   Dave Oran     Digital Equipment Corporation USA   Bob Segrest     Digital Equipment Corporation USA   Tim Streater     Stanford Linear Accelerator Center     Menlo Park, California USA     Email:  streater@slacvm.slac.stanford.edu   Allen Sturtevant  (Chair, Contributing Author, Document Editor)     Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory     Livermore, California USA     Email:  sturtevant@es.net   Mike Sullenberger     Stanford Linear Accelerator Center     Menlo Park, California USA     Email:  mls@scsw5.slac.stanford.edu   Alan Turner  (Contributing Author)     Pacific Northwest Laboratory     Richland, Washington USA     Email:  ae_turner@pnl.gov   Linda Winkler  (Contributing Author)     Argonne National Laboratory     Argonne, Illinois USA     Email:  b32357@anlvm.ctd.anl.gov   Russ Wright  (Contributing Author)     Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory     Berkeley, California USA     Email:  wright@lbl.govESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 85]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992Security Considerations   Security issues are discussed in sections2.5.1 and2.7.5.1 of this   memo.Authors' Addresses   Allen Sturtevant   Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory   P.O. Box 5509; L-561   Livermore, CA 94551   Phone:  +1 510-422-8266   Email:  sturtevant@es.net   Tony Genovese   Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory   P.O. Box 5509; L-561   Livermore, CA 94551   Phone:  +1 510-423-2471   Email:  genovese@es.net   Arlene Getchell   Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory   P.O. Box 5509; L-561   Livermore, CA 94551   Phone:  +1 510-423-6349   Email:  getchell@es.net   H. A. Kippenhan Jr.   Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory   Wilson Hall 6W, MS-234   P.O. Box 500   Batavia, IL 60150   Phone:  +1 708-840-8068   Email:  kippenhan@fnal.fnal.govESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 86]

RFC 1330            X.500 and X.400 Plans for ESnet             May 1992   Kevin Oberman   Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory   P.O. Box 5509; L-156   Livermore, CA 94551   Phone:  +1 510-422-6955   Email:  oberman1@llnl.gov   Alan Turner   Pacific Northwest Laboratory   P.O. Box 999; K7-57   Richland, WA 99352   Phone:  +1 509-375-6670   Email:  ae_turner@pnl.gov   Linda Winkler   Argonne National Laboratory   9700 South Cass Avenue   Building 221 B251   Argonne, IL 60439   Phone:  +1 708-252-7236   Email:  lwinkler@anl.gov   Russ Wright   Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory   1 Cyclotron Road   MS 50B-2258   Berkeley, CA 94720   Phone:  +1 510-486-6965   Email:  wright@lbl.govESCC X.500/X.400 Task Force                                    [Page 87]

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