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Obsoleted by:1706 EXPERIMENTAL
Network Working Group                                         B. ManningRequest for Comments: 1637                               Rice UniversityObsoletes:1348                                               R. ColellaCategory: Experimental                                              NIST                                                               June 1994DNS NSAP Resource RecordsStatus of this Memo   This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  This memo does not specify an Internet standard of any   kind.  Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.   Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Abstract   The Internet is moving towards the deployment of an OSI lower layers   infrastructure. This infrastructure comprises the connectionless   network protocol (CLNP) and supporting routing protocols. Also   required as part of this infrastructure is support in the Domain Name   System (DNS) for mapping between names and NSAP addresses.   This document defines the format of one new Resource Record (RR) for   the DNS for domain name-to-NSAP mapping. The RR may be used with any   NSAP address format. This document supercedesRFC 1348.   NSAP-to-name translation is accomplished through use of the PTR RR   (see STD 13,RFC 1035 for a description of the PTR RR). This paper   describes how PTR RRs are used to support this translation.Manning & Colella                                               [Page 1]

RFC 1637                      DNS NSAP RRs                     June 19941.  Introduction   The Internet is moving towards the deployment of an OSI lower layers   infrastructure. This infrastructure comprises the connectionless   network protocol (CLNP) [6] and supporting routing protocols. Also   required as part of this infrastructure is support in the Domain Name   System (DNS) [8] [9] for mapping between domain names and OSI Network   Service Access Point (NSAP) addresses [7] [Note: NSAP and NSAP   address are used interchangeably throughout this memo].   This document defines the format of one new Resource Record (RR) for   the DNS for domain name-to-NSAP mapping. The RR may be used with any   NSAP address format.   NSAP-to-name translation is accomplished through use of the PTR RR   (seeRFC 1035 for a description of the PTR RR). This paper describes   how PTR RRs are used to support this translation.   This memo assumes that the reader is familiar with the DNS. Some   familiarity with NSAPs is useful; see [2] or [7] for additional   information.2.  Background   The reason for defining DNS mappings for NSAPs is to support CLNP in   the Internet. Debugging with CLNP ping and traceroute is becoming   more difficult with only numeric NSAPs as the scale of deployment   increases. Current debugging is supported by maintaining and   exchanging a configuration file with name/NSAP mappings similar in   function to hosts.txt. This suffers from the lack of a central   coordinator for this file and also from the perspective of scaling.   The former is the most serious short-term problem. Scaling of a   hosts.txt-like solution has well-known long-term scaling   difficiencies.   A second reason for this work is the proposal to use CLNP as an   alternative to IP: "TCP and UDP with Bigger Addresses (TUBA), A   Simple Proposal for Internet Addressing and Routing" [1]. For this to   be practical, the DNS must be capable of supporting CLNP addresses.3.  Scope   The methods defined in this paper are applicable to all NSAP formats.   This includes support for the notion of a custom-defined NSAP format   based on an AFI obtained by the IAB for use in the Internet.   As a point of reference, there is a distinction between registration   and publication of addresses. For IP addresses, the IANA is the rootManning & Colella                                               [Page 2]

RFC 1637                      DNS NSAP RRs                     June 1994   registration authority and the DNS a publication method. For NSAPs,   addendum two of the network service definition, ISO8348/Ad2 [7] is   the root registration authority and this memo defines how the DNS is   used as a publication method.4.  Structure of NSAPs   NSAPs are hierarchically structured to allow distributed   administration and efficient routing. Distributed administration   permits subdelegated addressing authorities to, as allowed by the   delegator, further structure the portion of the NSAP space under   their delegated control.  Accomodating this distributed authority   requires that there be little or no a priori knowledge of the   structure of NSAPs built into DNS resolvers and servers.   For the purposes of this memo, NSAPs can be thought of as a tree of   identifiers. The root of the tree is ISO8348/Ad2 [7], and has as its   immediately registered subordinates the one-octet Authority and   Format Identifiers (AFIs) defined there. The size of subsequently-   defined fields depends on which branch of the tree is taken. The   depth of the tree varies according to the authority responsible for   defining subsequent fields.   An example is the authority under which U.S. GOSIP defines NSAPs [3].   Under the AFI of 47, NIST (National Institute of Standards and   Technology) obtained a value of 0005 (the AFI of 47 defines the next   field as being two octets consisting of four BCD digits from the   International Code Designator space [4]). NIST defined the subsequent   fields in [3], as shown in Figure 1. The field immediately following   0005 is a format identifier for the rest of the U.S. GOSIP NSAP   structure, with a hex value of 80. Following this is the three-octet   field, values for which are allocated to network operators; the   registration authority for this field is delegated to GSA (General   Services Administration).   The last octet of the NSAP is the NSelector (NSel). In practice, the   NSAP minus the NSel identifies the CLNP protocol machine on a given   system, and the NSel identifies the CLNP user. Since there can be   more than one CLNP user (meaning multiple NSel values for a given   "base" NSAP), the representation of the NSAP should be CLNP-user   independent. To achieve this, an NSel value of zero shall be used   with all NSAP values stored in the DNS. An NSAP with NSel=0   identifies the network layer itself. It is left to the application   retrieving the NSAP to determine the appropriate value to use in that   instance of communication.Manning & Colella                                               [Page 3]

RFC 1637                      DNS NSAP RRs                     June 1994              |--------------|              | <-- IDP -->  |              |--------------|-------------------------------------|              | AFI |  IDI   |            <-- DSP -->              |              |-----|--------|-------------------------------------|              | 47  |  0005  | DFI | AA |Rsvd | RD |Area | ID |Sel |              |-----|--------|-----|----|-----|----|-----|----|----|       octets |  1  |   2    |  1  | 3  |  2  | 2  |  2  | 6  | 1  |              |-----|--------|-----|----|-----|----|-----|----|----|                    IDP    Initial Domain Part                    AFI    Authority and Format Identifier                    IDI    Initial Domain Identifier                    DSP    Domain Specific Part                    DFI    DSP Format Identifier                    AA     Administrative Authority                    Rsvd   Reserved                    RD     Routing Domain Identifier                    Area   Area Identifier                    ID     System Identifier                    SEL    NSAP Selector                  Figure 1: GOSIP Version 2 NSAP structure.   When CLNP is used to support TCP and UDP services, the NSel value   used is the appropriate IP PROTO value as registered with the IANA.   For "standard" OSI, the selection of NSel values is left as a matter   of local administration. Administrators of systems that support the   OSI transport protocol [5] in addition to TCP/UDP must select NSels   for use by OSI Transport that do not conflict with the IP PROTO   values.   In the NSAP RRs in Master Files and in the printed text in this memo,   NSAPs are often represented as a string of "."-separated hex values.   The values correspond to convenient divisions of the NSAP to make it   more readable. For example, the "."-separated fields might correspond   to the NSAP fields as defined by the appropriate authority (ISOC,   RARE, U.S. GOSIP, ANSI, etc.). The use of this notation is strictly   for readability. The "."s do not appear in DNS packets and DNS   servers can ignore them when reading Master Files. For example, a   printable representation of the first four fields of a U.S. GOSIP   NSAP might look like                             47.0005.80.005a00Manning & Colella                                               [Page 4]

RFC 1637                      DNS NSAP RRs                     June 1994   and a full U.S. GOSIP NSAP might appear as             47.0005.80.005a00.0000.1000.0020.00800a123456.00.   Other NSAP formats have different lengths and different   administratively defined field widths to accomodate different   requirements. For more information on NSAP formats in use seeRFC1629 [2].5.  The NSAP RR   The NSAP RR is defined with mnemonic "NSAP" and TYPE code 22   (decimal) and is used to map from domain names to NSAPs. Name-to-NSAP   mapping in the DNS using the NSAP RR operates analogously to IP   address lookup. A query is generated by the resolver requesting an   NSAP RR for a provided domain name.   NSAP RRs conform to the top level RR format and semantics as defined   inSection 3.2.1 of RFC 1035.                                            1  1  1  1  1  1              0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  0  1  2  3  4  5           +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+           |                                               |           /                                               /           /                        NAME                   /           |                                               |           +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+           |                    TYPE = NSAP                |           +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+           |                    CLASS = IN                 |           +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+           |                        TTL                    |           |                                               |           +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+           |                      RDLENGTH                 |           +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+           /                       RDATA                   /           /                                               /           +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   where:   *  NAME: an owner name, i.e., the name of the node to which this      resource record pertains.   *  TYPE: two octets containing the NSAP RR TYPE code of 22 (decimal).Manning & Colella                                               [Page 5]

RFC 1637                      DNS NSAP RRs                     June 1994   *  CLASS: two octets containing the RR IN CLASS code of 1.   *  TTL: a 32 bit signed integer that specifies the time interval in      seconds that the resource record may be cached before the source      of the information should again be consulted. Zero values are      interpreted to mean that the RR can only be used for the      transaction in progress, and should not be cached. For example,      SOA records are always distributed with a zero TTL to prohibit      caching. Zero values can also be used for extremely volatile data.   *  RDLENGTH: an unsigned 16 bit integer that specifies the length in      octets of the RDATA field.   *  RDATA: a variable length string of octets containing the NSAP.      The value is the binary encoding of the NSAP as it would appear in      the CLNP source or destination address field. A typical example of      such an NSAP (in hex) is shown below. For this NSAP, RDLENGTH is      20 (decimal); "."s have been omitted to emphasize that they don't      appear in the DNS packets.                 39840f80005a0000000001e13708002010726e005.1  Additional Section Processing   [The specification in this section is necessary for completeness in   describing name server support for TUBA. For the time being, name   servers participating in TUBA demonstrations MAY ELECT to implement   this behavior; it SHOULD NOT be the default behavior of name servers   because the IPng sweepstakes are still outstanding and further   consideration is required for truncation and other issues.]RFC 1035 describes the additional section processing (ASP) required   when servers encounter NS records during query processing. FromSection 3.3.11, "NS RDATA format":      NS records cause both the usual additional section processing to      locate a type A record, and, when used in a referral, a special      search of the zone in which they reside for glue information.   For TUBA, identical ASP is required on type NSAP records to support   servers and resolvers that use CLNP, either because of preference or   because it is the only internetworking protocol available (i.e., in   the absense of IPv4). Thus, NS records cause ASP which locates a type   NSAP record in addition to a type A record. Both type A and NSAP   records should be returned, if available.Manning & Colella                                               [Page 6]

RFC 1637                      DNS NSAP RRs                     June 19946.  NSAP-to-name Mapping Using the PTR RR   The PTR RR is defined inRFC 1035. This RR is typically used under   the "IN-ADDR.ARPA" domain to map from IPv4 addresses to domain names.   Similarly, the PTR RR is used to map from NSAPs to domain names under   the "NSAP.INT" domain. A domain name is generated from the NSAP   according to the rules described below. A query is sent by the   resolver requesting a PTR RR for the provided domain name.   A domain name is generated from an NSAP by reversing the hex nibbles   of the NSAP, treating each nibble as a separate subdomain, and   appending the top-level subdomain name "NSAP.INT" to it. For example,   the domain name used in the reverse lookup for the NSAP             47.0005.80.005a00.0000.0001.e133.ffffff000162.00   would appear as     0.0.2.6.1.0.0.0.f.f.f.f.f.f.3.3.1.e.1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.a.5.0.0. \                         0.8.5.0.0.0.7.4.NSAP.INT.   [Implementation note: For sanity's sake user interfaces should be   designed to allow users to enter NSAPs using their natural order,   i.e., as they are typically written on paper. Also, arbitrary "."s   should be allowed (and ignored) on input.]7.  Master File Format   The format of NSAP RRs (and NSAP-related PTR RRs) in Master Files   conforms toSection 5, "Master Files," ofRFC 1035. Below are   examples of the use of these RRs in Master Files to support name-to-   NSAP and NSAP-to-name mapping.   The NSAP RR introduces a new hex string format for the RDATA field.   The format is "0x" (i.e., a zero followed by an 'x' character)   followed by a variable length string of hex characters (0 to 9, a to   f). The hex string is case-insensitive. "."s (i.e., periods) may be   inserted in the hex string anywhere after the "0x" for readability.   The "."s have no significance other than for readability and are not   propagated in the protocol (e.g., queries or zone transfers).Manning & Colella                                               [Page 7]

RFC 1637                      DNS NSAP RRs                     June 1994   ;;;;;;   ;;;;;; Master File for domain nsap.nist.gov.   ;;;;;;   @      IN     SOA    emu.ncsl.nist.gov.  root.emu.ncsl.nist.gov. (                                     1994041800   ; Serial  - date                                     1800         ; Refresh - 30 minutes                                     300          ; Retry   - 5 minutes                                     604800       ; Expire  - 7 days                                     3600 )       ; Minimum - 1 hour          IN     NS     emu.ncsl.nist.gov.          IN     NS     tuba.nsap.lanl.gov.   ;   ;   $ORIGIN nsap.nist.gov.   ;   ;     hosts   ;   bsdi1    IN  NSAP  0x47.0005.80.005a00.0000.0001.e133.ffffff000161.00            IN  A      129.6.224.161            IN  HINFO PC_486    BSDi1.1(TUBA)   ;   bsdi2    IN  NSAP  0x47.0005.80.005a00.0000.0001.e133.ffffff000162.00            IN  A      129.6.224.162            IN  HINFO PC_486    BSDi1.1(TUBA)   ;   cursive  IN  NSAP  0x47.0005.80.005a00.0000.0001.e133.ffffff000171.00            IN  A      129.6.224.171            IN  HINFO PC_386    DOS_5.0/NCSA_Telnet(TUBA)   ;   infidel  IN  NSAP  0x47.0005.80.005a00.0000.0001.e133.ffffff000164.00            IN  A      129.6.55.164            IN  HINFO PC/486    BSDi1.0(TUBA)   ;   ;     routers   ;   cisco1   IN  NSAP  0x47.0005.80.005a00.0000.0001.e133.aaaaaa000151.00            IN  A      129.6.224.151            IN  A      129.6.225.151            IN  A      129.6.229.151   ;   3com1    IN  NSAP  0x47.0005.80.005a00.0000.0001.e133.aaaaaa000111.00            IN  A      129.6.224.111            IN  A      129.6.225.111            IN  A      129.6.228.111Manning & Colella                                               [Page 8]

RFC 1637                      DNS NSAP RRs                     June 1994   ;;;;;;   ;;;;;; Master File for reverse mapping of NSAPs under the   ;;;;;;     NSAP prefix:   ;;;;;;   ;;;;;;          47.0005.80.005a00.0000.0001.e133   ;;;;;;   @      IN     SOA    emu.ncsl.nist.gov.  root.emu.ncsl.nist.gov. (                                     1994041800   ; Serial  - date                                     1800         ; Refresh - 30 minutes                                     300          ; Retry   - 5 minutes                                     604800       ; Expire  - 7 days                                     3600 )       ; Minimum - 1 hour          IN     NS     emu.ncsl.nist.gov.          IN     NS     tuba.nsap.lanl.gov.   ;   ;   $ORIGIN 3.3.1.e.1.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.a.5.0.0.0.8.5.0.0.0.7.4.NSAP.INT.   ;   0.0.1.6.1.0.0.0.f.f.f.f.f.f  IN    PTR  bsdi1.nsap.nist.gov.   ;   0.0.2.6.1.0.0.0.f.f.f.f.f.f  IN    PTR  bsdi2.nsap.nist.gov.   ;   0.0.1.7.1.0.0.0.f.f.f.f.f.f  IN    PTR  cursive.nsap.nist.gov.   ;   0.0.4.6.1.0.0.0.f.f.f.f.f.f  IN    PTR  infidel.nsap.nist.gov.   ;   0.0.1.5.1.0.0.0.a.a.a.a.a.a  IN    PTR  cisco1.nsap.nist.gov.   ;   0.0.1.1.1.0.0.0.a.a.a.a.a.a  IN    PTR  3com1.nsap.nist.gov.8.  Security Considerations   Security issues are not discussed in this memo.Manning & Colella                                               [Page 9]

RFC 1637                      DNS NSAP RRs                     June 19949.  Authors' Addresses   Bill Manning   Rice University -- ONCS   P.O. Box 1892   6100 South Main   Houston, Texas 77251-1892   USA   Phone: +1.713.285.5415   EMail: bmanning@rice.edu   Richard Colella   National Institute of Standards and Technology   Technology/B217   Gaithersburg, MD 20899   USA   Phone: +1 301-975-3627   Fax: +1 301 590-0932   EMail: colella@nist.gov10.  References   [1] Callon R., "TCP and UDP with Bigger Addresses (TUBA), A Simple       Proposal for Internet Addressing and Routing",RFC 1347, DEC,       June 1992.   [2] Colella, R., Gardner, E., Callon, R., and Y. Rekhter, "Guidelines       for OSI NSAP Allocation inh the Internet",RFC 1629, NIST,       Wellfleet, Mitre, T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corp., May       1994.   [3] GOSIP Advanced Requirements Group.  Government Open Systems       Interconnection Profile (GOSIP) Version 2. Federal Information       Processing Standard 146-1, U.S. Department of Commerce, National       Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD, April       1991.   [4] ISO/IEC.  Data interchange - structures for the identification of       organization.  International Standard 6523, ISO/IEC JTC 1,       Switzerland, 1984.   [5] ISO/IEC. Connection oriented transport protocol specification.       International Standard 8073, ISO/IEC JTC 1, Switzerland, 1986.Manning & Colella                                              [Page 10]

RFC 1637                      DNS NSAP RRs                     June 1994   [6] ISO/IEC.  Protocol for Providing the Connectionless-mode Network       Service.  International Standard 8473, ISO/IEC JTC 1,       Switzerland, 1986.   [7] ISO/IEC. Information Processing Systems -- Data Communications --       Network Service Definition Addendum 2: Network Layer Addressing.       International Standard 8348/Addendum 2, ISO/IEC JTC 1,       Switzerland, 1988.   [8] Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names -- Concepts and Facilities", STD       13,RFC 1034, USC/Information Sciences Institute, November 1987.   [9] Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names -- Implementation and       Specification", STD 13,RFC 1035, USC/Information Sciences       Institute, November 1987.Manning & Colella                                              [Page 11]

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