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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                        J. SeedorfRequest for Comments: 8008     HFT Stuttgart - Univ. of Applied SciencesCategory: Standards Track                                    J. PetersonISSN: 2070-1721                                                  Neustar                                                              S. Previdi                                                                   Cisco                                                      R. van Brandenburg                                                                     TNO                                                                   K. Ma                                                                Ericsson                                                           December 2016Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI) Request Routing:Footprint and Capabilities SemanticsAbstract   This document captures the semantics of the "Footprint and   Capabilities Advertisement" part of the Content Delivery Network   Interconnection (CDNI) Request Routing interface, i.e., the desired   meaning of "Footprint" and "Capabilities" in the CDNI context and   what the "Footprint & Capabilities Advertisement interface (FCI)"   offers within CDNI.  The document also provides guidelines for the   CDNI FCI protocol.  It further defines a Base Advertisement Object,   the necessary registries for capabilities and footprints, and   guidelines on how these registries can be extended in the future.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 7841.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8008.Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2016 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016Table of Contents1. Introduction and Scope ..........................................41.1. Terminology ................................................52. Design Decisions for Footprint and Capabilities .................62.1. Advertising Limited Coverage ...............................62.2. Capabilities and Dynamic Data ..............................72.3. Advertisement versus Queries ...............................82.4. Avoiding or Handling "Cheating" dCDNs ......................83. Focusing on Capabilities with Footprint Restrictions ............94. Footprint and Capabilities Extension ............................95. Capability Advertisement Object ................................115.1. Base Advertisement Object .................................125.2. Encoding ..................................................125.3. Delivery Protocol Capability Object .......................135.3.1. Delivery Protocol Capability Object Serialization ..135.4. Acquisition Protocol Capability Object ....................14           5.4.1. Acquisition Protocol Capability Object                  Serialization ......................................145.5. Redirection Mode Capability Object ........................155.5.1. Redirection Mode Capability Object Serialization ...155.6. CDNI Logging Capability Object ............................165.6.1. CDNI Logging Capability Object Serialization .......175.7. CDNI Metadata Capability Object ...........................185.7.1. CDNI Metadata Capability Object Serialization ......196. IANA Considerations ............................................206.1. CDNI Payload Types ........................................206.1.1. CDNI FCI DeliveryProtocol Payload Type .............206.1.2. CDNI FCI AcquisitionProtocol Payload Type ..........206.1.3. CDNI FCI RedirectionMode Payload Type ..............206.1.4. CDNI FCI Logging Payload Type ......................216.1.5. CDNI FCI Metadata Payload Type .....................216.2. "CDNI Capabilities Redirection Modes" Registry ............217. Security Considerations ........................................228. References .....................................................238.1. Normative References ......................................238.2. Informative References ....................................24Appendix A. Main Use Case to Consider .............................25Appendix B. Semantics for Footprint Advertisement .................25Appendix C. Semantics for Capabilities Advertisement ..............27   Acknowledgments ...................................................30   Authors' Addresses ................................................30Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20161.  Introduction and Scope   The CDNI working group is working on a set of protocols to enable the   interconnection of multiple CDNs.  These CDNI protocols can serve   multiple purposes, as discussed in [RFC6770] -- for instance, to   extend the reach of a given CDN to areas in the network that are not   covered by that particular CDN.   The goal of this document is to achieve a clear understanding about   the semantics associated with the CDNI Request Routing Footprint &   Capabilities Advertisement interface (from now on referred to as   the FCI) [RFC7336], in particular the type of information a   downstream CDN (dCDN) "advertises" regarding its footprint and   capabilities.  To narrow down undecided aspects of these semantics,   this document tries to establish a common understanding of what the   FCI needs to offer and accomplish in the context of CDNI.   Deciding on specific protocols to use for the FCI is explicitly   outside the scope of this document.  However, we provide guidelines   for such FCI protocols.   We make the following general assumptions in this document:   o  The CDNs participating in the CDN interconnection have already      performed a bootstrap process, i.e., they have connected to each      other, either directly or indirectly, and can exchange information      amongst each other.   o  The upstream CDN (uCDN) receives footprint advertisements and/or      capability advertisements from a set of dCDNs.  Footprint      advertisements and capability advertisements need not use the same      underlying protocol.   o  The uCDN receives the initial Request Routing message from the      endpoint requesting the resource.   The CDNI problem statement [RFC6707] describes the Request Routing   interface as "[enabling] a Request Routing function in an Upstream   CDN to query a Request Routing function in a Downstream CDN to   determine if the Downstream CDN is able (and willing) to accept the   delegated Content Request."  In addition, [RFC6707] says "the CDNI   Request Routing interface is also expected to enable a Downstream CDN   to provide to the Upstream CDN (static or dynamic) information (e.g.,   resources, footprint, load) to facilitate selection of the Downstream   CDN by the Upstream CDN Request Routing system when processing   subsequent Content Requests from User Agents."  It thus considers   "resources" and "load" as capabilities to be advertised by the dCDN.Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   The range of different footprint definitions and possible   capabilities is very broad.  Attempting to define a comprehensive   advertisement solution quickly becomes intractable.  The CDNI   requirements document [RFC7337] lists the specific requirements for   the CDNI FCI in order to disambiguate footprints and capabilities   with respect to CDNI.  This document defines a common understanding   of what the terms "footprint" and "capabilities" mean in the context   of CDNI and details the semantics of the footprint advertisement   mechanism and the capability advertisement mechanism.1.1.  Terminology   This document reuses the terminology defined in [RFC6707].   Additionally, the following terms are used throughout this document   and are defined as follows:   o  Footprint: a description of a CDN's coverage area, i.e., the area      from which client requests may originate for content and to which      the CDN is willing to deliver content.  Note: There are many ways      to describe a footprint -- for example, by address range (e.g.,      IPv4 CIDR or IPv6 CIDR (Classless Inter-Domain Routing), network      ID (e.g., Autonomous System Number (ASN)), nation boundaries      (e.g., country code), or GPS coordinates.  This document does not      define or endorse the quality or suitability of any particular      footprint description method; rather, it only defines a method for      transporting known footprint descriptions in Footprint and      Capabilities Advertisement messages.   o  Capability: a feature of a dCDN upon whose support a uCDN relies      when making delegation decisions.  Support for a given feature can      change over time and can be restricted to a limited portion of a      dCDN's footprint.  Note: There are many possible dCDN features      that could be of interest to a uCDN.  This document does not      presume to define them all; rather, it describes a scheme for      defining new capabilities and how to transport them in Footprint      and Capabilities Advertisement messages.   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [RFC2119].Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20162.  Design Decisions for Footprint and Capabilities   A large part of the difficulty in discussing the FCI lies in   understanding what exactly is meant when trying to define a footprint   in terms of "coverage" or "reachability".  While the operators of   CDNs pick strategic locations to situate Surrogates, a Surrogate with   a public IPv4 address is reachable by any endpoint on the Internet,   unless some policy enforcement precludes the use of the Surrogate.   Some CDNs aspire to cover the entire world; we refer to these as   global CDNs.  The footprint advertised by such a CDN in the CDNI   environment would, from a coverage or reachability perspective,   presumably cover all prefixes.  Potentially more interesting for CDNI   use cases, however, are CDNs that claim a more limited coverage area   but seek to interconnect with other CDNs in order to create a single   CDN fabric that shares resources.   Furthermore, not all capabilities need to be footprint-restricted.   Depending upon the use case, the optimal semantics of "footprints   with capability attributes" vs. "capabilities with footprint   restrictions" are not clear.   The key to understanding the semantics of footprint advertisements   and capability advertisements lies in understanding why a dCDN would   advertise a limited coverage area and how a uCDN would use such   advertisements to decide among one of several dCDNs.  The following   section will discuss some of the trade-offs and design decisions that   need to be made for the CDNI FCI.2.1.  Advertising Limited Coverage   The basic use case that would motivate a dCDN to advertise limited   coverage is that the CDN was built to cover only a particular portion   of the Internet.  For example, an ISP could purpose-build a CDN to   serve only their own customers by situating Surrogates in close   topological proximity to high concentrations of their subscribers.   The ISP knows the prefixes it has allocated to end users and thus can   easily construct a list of prefixes that its Surrogates were   positioned to serve.   When such a purpose-built CDN interconnects with other CDNs and   advertises its footprint to a uCDN, however, the original intended   coverage of the CDN might not represent its actual value to the   interconnection of CDNs.  Consider an ISP-A and ISP-B that both field   their own CDNs, which they interconnect via CDNI.  A given user E,   who is a customer of ISP-B, might happen to be topologically closer   to a Surrogate fielded by ISP-A, if E happens to live in a region   where ISP-B has few customers and ISP-A has many.  In this case, isSeedorf, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   it ISP-A's CDN that "covers" E?  If ISP-B's CDN has a failure   condition, is it up to the uCDN to understand that ISP-A's Surrogates   are potentially available as backups, and if so, how does ISP-A   advertise itself as a "standby" for E?  What about the case where   CDNs advertising to the same uCDN express overlapping coverage (for   example, mixing global and limited CDNs)?   The answers to these questions greatly depend on how much information   the uCDN wants to use to select a dCDN.  If a uCDN has three dCDNs to   choose from that "cover" the IP address of user E, obviously the uCDN   might be interested in knowing how optimal the coverage is from each   of the dCDNs.  Coverage need not be binary (i.e., either provided or   not provided); dCDNs could advertise a coverage "score", for example,   and provided that they all reported scores fairly on the same scale,   uCDNs could use that information to make their topological optimality   decision.  Alternately, dCDNs could advertise the IP addresses of   their Surrogates rather than prefix "coverage" and let the uCDN   decide for itself (based on its own topological intelligence) which   dCDN has better resources to serve a given user.   In summary, the semantics of advertising a footprint depend on   whether (1) such qualitative metrics for expressing a footprint (such   as the coverage "score" mentioned above) are included as part of the   CDNI FCI or (2) the focus is just on a "binary" footprint.2.2.  Capabilities and Dynamic Data   In cases where the apparent footprints of dCDNs overlap, uCDNs might   also want to rely on other factors to evaluate the respective merits   of dCDNs.  These include facts related to the Surrogates themselves,   the network where the Surrogate is deployed, the nature of the   resource sought, and the administrative policies of the respective   networks.   In the absence of network-layer impediments to reaching Surrogates,   the choice to limit coverage is, by necessity, an administrative   policy.  Much policy needs to be agreed upon before CDNs can   interconnect, including questions of membership, compensation,   volumes, and so on.  A uCDN certainly will factor these sorts of   considerations into its decision to select a dCDN, but there is   probably little need for dCDNs to actually advertise them through an   interface -- they will be settled out-of-band as a precondition for   interconnection.   Other facts about the dCDN would be expressed through the interface   to the uCDN.  Some capabilities of a dCDN are static, and some are   highly dynamic.  Expressing the total storage built into its   Surrogates, for example, changes relatively rarely, whereas theSeedorf, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   amount of storage in use at any given moment is highly volatile.   Network bandwidth similarly could be expressed either as total   bandwidth available to a Surrogate or based on the current state of   the network.  A Surrogate can at one moment lack a particular   resource in storage but have it the next.   The semantics of the capabilities interface will depend on how much   of the dCDN state needs to be pushed to the uCDN and, qualitatively,   how often that information needs to be updated.2.3.  Advertisement versus Queries   In a CDNI environment, each dCDN shares some of its state with the   uCDN.  The uCDN uses this information to build a unified picture of   all of the dCDNs available to it.  In architectures that share   detailed capability information, the uCDN could perform the entire   Request Routing operation down to selecting a particular Surrogate in   the dCDN.  However, when the uCDN needs to deal with many potential   dCDNs, this approach does not scale, especially for dCDNs with   thousands or tens of thousands of Surrogates; the volume of updates   to the footprint and the capability information becomes onerous.   Were the volume of FCI updates from dCDNs to exceed the volume of   requests to the uCDN, it might make more sense for the uCDN to query   dCDNs upon receiving requests (as is the case in the recursive   redirection mode described in [RFC7336]), instead of receiving   advertisements and tracking the state of dCDNs.  The advantage of   querying dCDNs would be that much of the dynamic data that dCDNs   cannot share with the uCDN would now be factored into the uCDN's   decision. dCDNs need not replicate any state to the uCDN -- uCDNs   could effectively operate in a stateless mode.   The semantics of both footprint advertisements and capability   advertisements depend on the service model here: are there cases   where a synchronous query/response model would work better for the   uCDN decision than a state replication model?2.4.  Avoiding or Handling "Cheating" dCDNs   In a situation where more than one dCDN is willing to serve a given   end user request, it might be attractive for a dCDN to "cheat" in the   sense that the dCDN provides inaccurate information to the uCDN in   order to convince the uCDN to select it over "competing" dCDNs.  It   could therefore be desirable to take away the incentive for dCDNs to   cheat (in information advertised) as much as possible.  One option is   to make the information the dCDN advertises somehow verifiable for   the uCDN.  On the other hand, a "cheating" dCDN might be avoided orSeedorf, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   handled by the fact that there will be strong contractual agreements   between a uCDN and a dCDN, so that a dCDN would risk severe penalties   or legal consequences when caught cheating.   Overall, the information a dCDN advertises (in the long run) needs to   be somehow qualitatively verifiable by the uCDN, though possibly   through non-real-time out-of-band audits.  It is probably an overly   strict requirement to mandate that such verification be possible   "immediately", i.e., during the Request Routing process itself.  If   the uCDN can detect a cheating dCDN at a later stage, it might   suffice for the uCDN to "de-incentivize" cheating because it would   negatively affect the long-term business relationship with a   particular dCDN.3.  Focusing on Capabilities with Footprint Restrictions   Given the design considerations listed in the previous section, it   seems reasonable to assume that in most cases it is the uCDN that   makes the decision to select a certain dCDN for Request Routing based   on information the uCDN has received from this particular dCDN.  It   can be assumed that cheating dCDNs will be dealt with via means   outside the scope of CDNI and that the information advertised between   CDNs is accurate.  In addition, excluding the use of qualitative   information (e.g., Surrogate proximity, delivery latency, Surrogate   load) to predict the quality of delivery would further simplify the   use case, allowing it to better focus on the basic functionality of   the FCI.   Furthermore, understanding that in most cases contractual agreements   will define the basic coverage used in delegation decisions, the   primary focus of the FCI is on providing updates to the basic   capabilities and coverage by the dCDNs.  As such, the FCI has chosen   the semantics of "capabilities with footprint restrictions".4.  Footprint and Capabilities Extension   Other optional "coverage/reachability" footprint types or "resource"   footprint types may be defined by future specifications.  To   facilitate this, a clear process for specifying optional footprint   types in an IANA registry is specified in the "CDNI Metadata   Footprint Types" registry (defined in the CDNI Metadata interface   document [RFC8006]).Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   This document also registers CDNI Payload Types [RFC7736] for the   initial capability types (seeSection 6):   o  Delivery Protocol (for delivering content to the end user)   o  Acquisition Protocol (for acquiring content from the uCDN or      origin server)   o  Redirection Mode (e.g., DNS redirection vs. HTTP redirection as      discussed in [RFC7336])   o  CDNI Logging (i.e., supported CDNI Logging fields)   o  CDNI Metadata (i.e., supported GenericMetadata types)   Each Payload Type is prefaced with "FCI.".  Updates to capability   objects MUST indicate the version of the capability object in a newly   registered Payload Type, e.g., by appending ".v2".  Each capability   type MAY have a list of valid values.  Future specifications that   define a given capability MUST define any necessary registries (and   the rules for adding new entries to the registry) for the values   advertised for a given capability type.   The "CDNI Logging record-types" registry [RFC7937] defines all known   record-types, including "mandatory-to-implement" record-types.   Advertising support for mandatory-to-implement record-types would be   redundant.  CDNs SHOULD NOT advertise support for   mandatory-to-implement record-types.   The "CDNI Logging Field Names" registry [RFC7937] defines all known   CDNI Logging fields.  CDNI Logging fields may be reused by different   record-types and be mandatory-to-implement in some record-types, but   they may be optional in other record-types.  CDNs MUST advertise   support for optional CDNI Logging fields within the context of a   specific record-type.  For a given record-type, CDNs SHOULD NOT   advertise support for mandatory-to-implement CDNI Logging fields.   The following CDNI Logging fields are defined as optional for the   "cdni_http_request_v1" record-type [RFC7937]:   o  s-ccid   o  s-sid   [RFC8006] requires that CDNs be able to parse all the defined   metadata objects but does not require dCDNs to support enforcement of   non-structural GenericMetadata objects.  Advertising support for   "mandatory-to-enforce" GenericMetadata types MUST be provided.   Advertising support for non-mandatory-to-enforce GenericMetadataSeedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   types SHOULD be provided.  Advertisement of non-mandatory-to-enforce   GenericMetadata MAY be necessary, e.g., to signal temporary outages   and subsequent recovery.  It is expected that structural metadata   will be supported at all times.   The notion of optional footprint types and capability types implies   that certain implementations might not support all kinds of   footprints and capabilities.  Therefore, any FCI solution protocol   MUST define how the support for optional footprint types and   capability types will be negotiated between a uCDN and a dCDN that   use the particular FCI protocol.  In particular, any FCI solution   protocol MUST specify how to handle failure cases or non-supported   footprint or capability types.   In general, a uCDN MAY ignore capabilities or footprint types it does   not understand; in this case, it only selects a suitable dCDN based   on the types of capabilities and footprints it understands.   Similarly, if a dCDN does not use an optional capability or footprint   that is, however, supported by a uCDN, this causes no problem for FCI   functionality because the uCDN decides on the remaining   capabilities/footprint information that is being conveyed by   the dCDN.5.  Capability Advertisement Object   To support extensibility, the FCI defines a generic base object   (similar to the CDNI Metadata interface GenericMetadata object)   [RFC8006] to facilitate a uniform set of mandatory parsing   requirements for all future FCI objects.   Future object definitions (e.g., regarding the CDNI Metadata or CDNI   Logging interfaces) will build off the base object defined here but   will be specified in separate documents.   Note: In the following sections, the term "mandatory-to-specify" is   used to convey which properties MUST be included when serializing a   given capability object.  When mandatory-to-specify is defined as   "Yes" for an individual property, it means that if the object   containing that property is included in an FCI message, then the   mandatory-to-specify property MUST also be included.Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20165.1.  Base Advertisement Object   The FCIBase object is an abstraction for managing individual CDNI   capabilities in an opaque manner.      Property: capability-type         Description: CDNI capability object type.         Type: FCI-specific CDNI Payload Type (from the "CDNI Payload         Types" registry [RFC7736])         Mandatory-to-Specify: Yes.      Property: capability-value         Description: CDNI capability object.         Type: Format/Type is defined by the value of the         capability-type property above         Mandatory-to-Specify: Yes.      Property: footprints         Description: CDNI capability footprint.         Type: List of CDNI Footprint objects (from the "CDNI Metadata         Footprint Types" registry [RFC8006])         Mandatory-to-Specify: No.5.2.  Encoding   CDNI FCI objects MUST be encoded using JSON [RFC7159] and MUST also   follow the recommendations of I-JSON (Internet JSON) [RFC7493].  FCI   objects are composed of a dictionary of (key,value) pairs where the   keys are the property names and the values are the associated   property values.   The keys of the dictionary are the names of the properties associated   with the object and are therefore dependent on the specific object   being encoded (i.e., dependent on the CDNI Payload Type of the   capability or the CDNI Metadata Footprint Type of the footprint).   Likewise, the values associated with each property (dictionary key)   are dependent on the specific object being encoded (i.e., dependent   on the CDNI Payload Type of the capability or the CDNI Metadata   Footprint Type of the footprint).Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   Dictionary keys (properties) in JSON are case sensitive.  By   convention, any dictionary key (property) defined by this document   MUST be lowercase.5.3.  Delivery Protocol Capability Object   The Delivery Protocol capability object is used to indicate support   for one or more of the protocols listed in the "CDNI Metadata   Protocol Types" registry (defined in [RFC8006]).      Property: delivery-protocols         Description: List of supported CDNI delivery protocols.         Type: List of protocol types (from the "CDNI Metadata Protocol         Types" registry [RFC8006])         Mandatory-to-Specify: Yes.5.3.1.  Delivery Protocol Capability Object Serialization   The following shows an example of Delivery Protocol capability object   serialization for a CDN that supports only HTTP/1.1 without Transport   Layer Security (TLS) for content delivery.   {     "capabilities": [       {         "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",         "capability-value": {           "delivery-protocols": [             "http/1.1",           ]         },         "footprints": [           <Footprint objects>         ]       }     ]   }Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20165.4.  Acquisition Protocol Capability Object   The Acquisition Protocol capability object is used to indicate   support for one or more of the protocols listed in the "CDNI Metadata   Protocol Types" registry (defined in [RFC8006]).      Property: acquisition-protocols         Description: List of supported CDNI acquisition protocols.         Type: List of protocol types (from the "CDNI Metadata Protocol         Types" registry [RFC8006])         Mandatory-to-Specify: Yes.5.4.1.  Acquisition Protocol Capability Object Serialization   The following shows an example of Acquisition Protocol capability   object serialization for a CDN that supports HTTP/1.1 with or without   TLS for content acquisition.   {     "capabilities": [       {         "capability-type": "FCI.AcquisitionProtocol",         "capability-value": {           "acquisition-protocols": [             "http/1.1",             "https/1.1"           ]         },         "footprints": [           <Footprint objects>         ]       }     ]   }Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20165.5.  Redirection Mode Capability Object   The Redirection Mode capability object is used to indicate support   for one or more of the modes listed in the "CDNI Capabilities   Redirection Modes" registry (seeSection 6.2).      Property: redirection-modes         Description: List of supported CDNI redirection modes.         Type: List of redirection modes (from the "CDNI Capabilities         Redirection Modes" registry, defined inSection 6.2)         Mandatory-to-Specify: Yes.5.5.1.  Redirection Mode Capability Object Serialization   The following shows an example of Redirection Mode capability object   serialization for a CDN that supports only iterative (i.e., not   recursive) redirection with HTTP and DNS.   {     "capabilities": [       {         "capability-type": "FCI.RedirectionMode",         "capability-value": {           "redirection-modes": [             "DNS-I",             "HTTP-I"           ]         }         "footprints": [           <Footprint objects>         ]       }     ]   }Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20165.6.  CDNI Logging Capability Object   The CDNI Logging capability object is used to indicate support for   CDNI Logging record-types, as well as CDNI Logging fields that are   marked as optional for the specified record-types [RFC7937].      Property: record-type         Description: Supported CDNI Logging record-type.         Type: String corresponding to an entry from the "CDNI Logging         record-types" registry [RFC7937]         Mandatory-to-Specify: Yes.      Property: fields         Description: List of supported CDNI Logging fields that are         optional for the specified record-type.         Type: List of strings corresponding to entries from the "CDNI         Logging Field Names" registry [RFC7937]         Mandatory-to-Specify: No.  Default is that all optional fields         are supported.  Omission of this field MUST be interpreted as         "all optional fields are supported".  An empty list MUST be         interpreted as "no optional fields are supported".  Otherwise,         if a list of fields is provided, the fields in that list MUST         be interpreted as "the only optional fields that are         supported".Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20165.6.1.  CDNI Logging Capability Object Serialization   The following shows an example of CDNI Logging capability object   serialization for a CDN that supports the optional Content   Collection ID CDNI Logging field (but not the optional Session ID   CDNI Logging field) for the "cdni_http_request_v1" record-type.   {     "capabilities": [       {         "capability-type": "FCI.Logging",         "capability-value": {           "record-type": "cdni_http_request_v1",           "fields": ["s-ccid"]         },         "footprints": [           <Footprint objects>         ]       }     ]   }   The next example shows the CDNI Logging capability object   serialization for a CDN that supports all optional fields for the   "cdni_http_request_v1" record-type.   {     "capabilities": [       {         "capability-type": "FCI.Logging",         "capability-value": {           "record-type": "cdni_http_request_v1"         },         "footprints": [           <Footprint objects>         ]       }     ]   }Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   The final example shows the CDNI Logging capability object   serialization for a CDN that supports none of the optional fields for   the "cdni_http_request_v1" record-type.   {     "capabilities": [       {         "capability-type": "FCI.Logging",         "capability-value": {           "record-type": "cdni_http_request_v1",           "fields": []         },         "footprints": [           <Footprint objects>         ]       }     ]   }5.7.  CDNI Metadata Capability Object   The CDNI Metadata capability object is used to indicate support for   CDNI GenericMetadata types [RFC8006].      Property: metadata         Description: List of supported CDNI GenericMetadata types.         Type: List of strings corresponding to entries from the "CDNI         Payload Types" registry [RFC7736] that correspond to CDNI         GenericMetadata objects         Mandatory-to-Specify: Yes.  An empty list MUST be interpreted         as "no GenericMetadata types are supported", i.e., "only         structural metadata and simple types are supported"; otherwise,         the list must be interpreted as containing "the only         GenericMetadata types that are supported" (in addition to         structural metadata and simple types) [RFC8006].Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20165.7.1.  CDNI Metadata Capability Object Serialization   The following shows an example of CDNI Metadata capability object   serialization for a CDN that supports only the SourceMetadata   GenericMetadata type (i.e., it can acquire and deliver content but   cannot enforce any security policies, e.g., time, location, or   protocol Access Control Lists (ACLs)).   {     "capabilities": [       {         "capability-type": "FCI.Metadata",         "capability-value": {           "metadata": ["MI.SourceMetadata"]         },         "footprints": [           <Footprint objects>         ]       }     ]   }   The next example shows the CDNI Metadata capability object   serialization for a CDN that supports only structural metadata (i.e.,   it can parse metadata as a transit CDN but cannot enforce security   policies or deliver content).   {     "capabilities": [       {         "capability-type": "FCI.Metadata",         "capability-value": {           "metadata": []         },         "footprints": [           <Footprint objects>         ]       }     ]   }Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20166.  IANA Considerations6.1.  CDNI Payload Types   This document registers the following CDNI Payload Types under the   IANA "CDNI Payload Types" registry:                +-------------------------+---------------+                | Payload Type            | Specification |                +-------------------------+---------------+                | FCI.DeliveryProtocol    |RFC 8008      |                | FCI.AcquisitionProtocol |RFC 8008      |                | FCI.RedirectionMode     |RFC 8008      |                | FCI.Logging             |RFC 8008      |                | FCI.Metadata            |RFC 8008      |                +-------------------------+---------------+6.1.1.  CDNI FCI DeliveryProtocol Payload Type   Purpose: The purpose of this Payload Type is to distinguish FCI   advertisement objects for supported delivery protocols   Interface: FCI   Encoding: seeSection 5.36.1.2.  CDNI FCI AcquisitionProtocol Payload Type   Purpose: The purpose of this Payload Type is to distinguish FCI   advertisement objects for supported acquisition protocols   Interface: FCI   Encoding: seeSection 5.46.1.3.  CDNI FCI RedirectionMode Payload Type   Purpose: The purpose of this Payload Type is to distinguish FCI   advertisement objects for supported redirection modes   Interface: FCI   Encoding: seeSection 5.5Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20166.1.4.  CDNI FCI Logging Payload Type   Purpose: The purpose of this Payload Type is to distinguish FCI   advertisement objects for supported CDNI Logging record-types and   optional CDNI Logging field names   Interface: FCI   Encoding: seeSection 5.66.1.5.  CDNI FCI Metadata Payload Type   Purpose: The purpose of this Payload Type is to distinguish FCI   advertisement objects for supported CDNI GenericMetadata types   Interface: FCI   Encoding: seeSection 5.76.2.  "CDNI Capabilities Redirection Modes" Registry   IANA has created a new "CDNI Capabilities Redirection Modes" registry   in the "Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI) Parameters"   registry.  The "CDNI Capabilities Redirection Modes" namespace   defines the valid redirection modes that can be advertised as   supported by a CDN.  Additions to the "CDNI Capabilities Redirection   Modes" namespace conform to the IETF Review policy as defined in   [RFC5226].   The following table defines the initial redirection modes:    +------------------+----------------------------------+----------+    | Redirection Mode | Description                      | RFC      |    +------------------+----------------------------------+----------+    | DNS-I            | Iterative DNS-based Redirection  |RFC 8008 |    | DNS-R            | Recursive DNS-based Redirection  |RFC 8008 |    | HTTP-I           | Iterative HTTP-based Redirection |RFC 8008 |    | HTTP-R           | Recursive HTTP-based Redirection |RFC 8008 |    +------------------+----------------------------------+----------+Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20167.  Security Considerations   This specification describes the semantics for capabilities and   footprint advertisement objects across interconnected CDNs.  It does   not, however, specify a concrete protocol for transporting those   objects.  Specific security mechanisms can only be selected for   concrete protocols that instantiate these semantics.  This document   does, however, place some high-level security constraints on such   protocols.   All protocols that implement these capabilities and footprint   advertisement objects are REQUIRED to provide integrity and   authentication services.  Without authentication and integrity, an   attacker could trivially deny service by forging a footprint   advertisement from a dCDN that claims the network has no footprint or   capability.  This would prevent the uCDN from delegating any requests   to the dCDN.  Since a preexisting relationship between all dCDNs and   uCDNs is assumed by CDNI, the exchange of any necessary credentials   could be conducted before the FCI is brought online.  The   authorization decision to accept advertisements would also follow   this preexisting relationship and any contractual obligations that it   stipulates.   All protocols that implement these capabilities and footprint   advertisement objects are REQUIRED to provide confidentiality   services.  Some dCDNs are willing to share information about their   footprints or capabilities with a uCDN but not with other, competing   dCDNs.  For example, if a dCDN incurs an outage that reduces   footprint coverage temporarily, that event could be information the   dCDN would want to share confidentially with the uCDN.   As specified in this document, the security requirements of the FCI   could be met by transport-layer security mechanisms coupled with   domain certificates as credentials (e.g., TLS transport for HTTP as   per [RFC2818] and [RFC7230], with usage guidance from [RFC7525])   between CDNs.  There is no apparent need for further object-level   security in this framework, as the trust relationships it defines are   bilateral relationships between uCDNs and dCDNs rather than   transitive relationships.Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20168.  References8.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119,              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.   [RFC5226]  Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an              IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 5226,              DOI 10.17487/RFC5226, May 2008,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5226>.   [RFC7159]  Bray, T., Ed., "The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data              Interchange Format",RFC 7159, DOI 10.17487/RFC7159,              March 2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7159>.   [RFC7336]  Peterson, L., Davie, B., and R. van Brandenburg, Ed.,              "Framework for Content Distribution Network              Interconnection (CDNI)",RFC 7336, DOI 10.17487/RFC7336,              August 2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7336>.   [RFC7493]  Bray, T., Ed., "The I-JSON Message Format",RFC 7493,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7493, March 2015,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7493>.   [RFC7937]  Le Faucheur, F., Ed., Bertrand, G., Ed., Oprescu, I., Ed.,              and R. Peterkofsky, "Content Distribution Network              Interconnection (CDNI) Logging Interface",RFC 7937,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7937, August 2016,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7937>.   [RFC8006]  Niven-Jenkins, B., Murray, R., Caulfield, M., and K. Ma,              "Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI)              Metadata",RFC 8006, DOI 10.17487/RFC8006, December 2016,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8006>.Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 20168.2.  Informative References   [RFC2818]  Rescorla, E., "HTTP Over TLS",RFC 2818,              DOI 10.17487/RFC2818, May 2000,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2818>.   [RFC6707]  Niven-Jenkins, B., Le Faucheur, F., and N. Bitar, "Content              Distribution Network Interconnection (CDNI) Problem              Statement",RFC 6707, DOI 10.17487/RFC6707,              September 2012, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6707>.   [RFC6770]  Bertrand, G., Ed., Stephan, E., Burbridge, T., Eardley,              P., Ma, K., and G. Watson, "Use Cases for Content Delivery              Network Interconnection",RFC 6770, DOI 10.17487/RFC6770,              November 2012, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6770>.   [RFC7230]  Fielding, R., Ed., and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext              Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing",RFC 7230, DOI 10.17487/RFC7230, June 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7230>.   [RFC7337]  Leung, K., Ed., and Y. Lee, Ed., "Content Distribution              Network Interconnection (CDNI) Requirements",RFC 7337,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7337, August 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7337>.   [RFC7525]  Sheffer, Y., Holz, R., and P. Saint-Andre,              "Recommendations for Secure Use of Transport Layer              Security (TLS) and Datagram Transport Layer Security              (DTLS)",BCP 195,RFC 7525, DOI 10.17487/RFC7525,              May 2015, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7525>.   [RFC7736]  Ma, K., "Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI)              Media Type Registration",RFC 7736, DOI 10.17487/RFC7736,              December 2015, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7736>.Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016Appendix A.  Main Use Case to Consider   Focusing on a main use case that contains a simple (yet somewhat   challenging), realistic, and generally imaginable scenario can help   narrow down the requirements for the CDNI FCI.  To this end, the   following (simplified) use case can help clarify the semantics of   footprints and capabilities for CDNI.  In particular, the intention   of the use case is to clarify what information needs to be exchanged   on the CDNI FCI, what types of information need to be supported in a   mandatory fashion (and which types can be considered optional), and   what types of information need to be updated with respect to a priori   established CDNI contracts.   Use case: A given uCDN has several dCDNs.  It selects one dCDN for   delivery protocol A and footprint 1 and another dCDN for delivery   protocol B and footprint 1.  The dCDN that serves delivery protocol B   has a further, transitive (level-2) dCDN that serves delivery   protocol B in a subset of footprint 1 where the first-level dCDN   cannot serve delivery protocol B itself.  What happens if   capabilities change in the transitive level-2 dCDN that might affect   how the uCDN selects a level-1 dCDN (e.g., in case the level-2 dCDN   cannot serve delivery protocol B anymore)?  How will these changes be   conveyed to the uCDN?  In particular, what information does the uCDN   need to be able to select a new first-level dCDN, for either all of   footprint 1 or only the subset of footprint 1 that the transitive   level-2 dCDN served on behalf of the first-level dCDN?Appendix B.  Semantics for Footprint Advertisement   Roughly speaking, "footprint" can be defined as a dCDN's "ability and   willingness to serve".  However, in addition to simple ability and   willingness to serve, the uCDN could want additional information   before deciding which dCDN to select, e.g., "how well" a given dCDN   can actually serve a given end user request.  The dCDN's ability and   willingness to serve SHOULD be distinguished from the subjective   qualitative measurement of how well it can serve a given end user   request.  One can imagine that such additional information is   implicitly associated with a given footprint, due to contractual   agreements, Service Level Agreements (SLAs), business relationships,   or past perceptions of dCDN quality.  As an alternative, such   additional information could also be explicitly included with the   given footprint.   It is reasonable to assume that a significant part of the actual   footprint advertisement will occur out-of-band, prior to any CDNI FCI   advertisement, with footprints defined in contractual agreements   between participating CDNs.  The reason for this assumption is that   any contractual agreement is likely to contain specifics about theSeedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   dCDN coverage (footprint) to which the contractual agreement applies.   In particular, additional information to judge the delivery quality   associated with a given dCDN footprint might be defined in   contractual agreements, outside of the CDNI FCI.  Further, one can   assume that dCDN contractual agreements about the delivery quality   associated with a given footprint will probably be based on   high-level aggregated statistics and will not be too detailed.   Given that a large part of the footprint advertisement will be   defined in contractual agreements, the semantics of CDNI footprint   advertisement refer to answering the following question: what exactly   still needs to be advertised by the CDNI FCI?  For instance, updates   about temporal failures of part of a footprint can be useful   information to convey via the CDNI Request Routing interface.  Such   information would provide updates on information previously agreed   upon in contracts between the participating CDNs.  In other words,   the CDNI FCI is a means for a dCDN to provide changes/updates   regarding a footprint it has previously agreed to serve in a contract   with a uCDN.   Generally speaking, one can imagine two categories of footprints to   be advertised by a dCDN:   o  A footprint could be defined based on coverage/reachability, where      "coverage/reachability" refers to a set of prefixes, a geographic      region, or similar boundary.  The dCDN claims that it can      cover/reach "end user requests coming from this footprint".   o  A footprint could be defined based on resources, where "resources"      refers to Surrogates a dCDN claims to have (e.g., the location of      Surrogates/resources).  The dCDN claims that "from this footprint"      it can serve incoming end user requests.   For each of these footprint types, there are capabilities associated   with a given footprint:   o  capabilities such as delivery protocol, redirection mode, and      metadata, which are supported in the coverage area for a footprint      that is defined by coverage/reachability, or   o  capabilities of resources, such as delivery protocol, redirection      mode, and metadata, which apply to a footprint that is defined by      resources.   Resource footprint types are more specific than coverage/reachability   footprint types, where the actual coverage and reachability are   extrapolated from the resource location (e.g., a netmask applied to a   resource IP address to derive an IP prefix).  The specific methodsSeedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   for extrapolating coverage/reachability from the resource location   are beyond the scope of this document.  In the degenerate case, the   resource address could be specified as a coverage/reachability   footprint type, in which case no extrapolation is necessary.   Resource footprint types could expose the internal structure of a   CDN; this could be undesirable.  As such, the resource footprint   types are not considered mandatory to support for CDNI.   Footprints can be viewed as constraints for delegating requests to a   dCDN: a dCDN footprint advertisement tells the uCDN the limitations   for delegating a request to the dCDN.  For IP prefixes or ASN(s), the   footprint signals to the uCDN that it should consider the dCDN a   candidate only if the IP address of the Request Routing source falls   within the prefix set (or ASN, respectively).  The CDNI   specifications do not define how a given uCDN determines what address   ranges are in a particular ASN.  Similarly, for country codes, a uCDN   should only consider the dCDN a candidate if it covers the country of   the Request Routing source.  The CDNI specifications do not define   how a given uCDN determines the country of the Request Routing   source.  Multiple footprint constraints are additive: the   advertisement of different footprint types narrows the dCDN's   candidacy cumulatively.   Independent of the exact type of a footprint, a footprint might also   include the connectivity of a given dCDN to other CDNs that are able   to serve content to users on behalf of that dCDN, to cover cases with   cascaded CDNs.  Further, the dCDN needs to be able to express its   footprint to an interested uCDN in a comprehensive form, e.g., as a   data set containing the complete footprint.  However, making   incremental updates to express dynamic changes in state is also   desirable.Appendix C.  Semantics for Capabilities Advertisement   In general, the dCDN needs to be able to express its general   capabilities to the uCDN.  These general capabilities could indicate   if the dCDN supports a given service -- for instance, HTTP vs. HTTPS   delivery.  Furthermore, the dCDN needs to be able to express   particular capabilities for service delivery in a particular   footprint area.  For example, the dCDN might in general offer HTTPS   but not in some specific areas, either for maintenance reasons or   because the Surrogates covering this particular area cannot deliver   this type of service.  Hence, in certain cases a footprint and   capabilities are tied together and cannot be interpreted   independently of each other.  In such cases, i.e., where capabilities   need to be expressed on a per-footprint basis, it could be beneficial   to combine footprint advertisement and capabilities advertisement.Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   A high-level and very rough semantic for capabilities is thus the   following: capabilities are types of information that allow a uCDN to   determine if a dCDN is able (and willing) to accept (and properly   handle) a delegated content request.  In addition, capabilities are   characterized by the fact that this information can change over time   based on the state of the network or Surrogates.   At first glance, several broad categories of capabilities seem useful   to convey via an advertisement interface; however, advertising   capabilities that change highly dynamically (e.g., real-time delivery   performance metrics, CDN resource load, or other highly dynamically   changing QoS information) are beyond the scope of the CDNI FCI.   First, out of the multitude of possible metrics and capabilities, it   is hard to agree on a subset and the precise metrics to be used.   Second, it seems infeasible to specify such highly dynamically   changing capabilities and the corresponding metrics within a   reasonable time frame.   Useful capabilities refer to information that does not change highly   dynamically and that, in many cases, is absolutely necessary for   deciding on a particular dCDN for a given end user request.  For   instance, if an end user request concerns the delivery of a video   file with a certain protocol, the uCDN needs to know if a given dCDN   is capable of supporting this delivery protocol.   Similar to footprint advertisement, it is reasonable to assume that a   significant part of the actual (resource) capabilities advertisement   will also occur out-of-band, prior to any CDNI FCI advertisement,   with capabilities defined in contractual agreements between   participating CDNs.  The role of capability advertisement is hence   rather to enable the dCDN to update a uCDN on changes since a   contract has been set up (e.g., in case a new delivery protocol is   suddenly being added to the list of supported delivery protocols of a   given dCDN or in case a certain delivery protocol is suddenly not   being supported anymore due to failures).  "Capabilities   advertisement" thus refers to conveying information to a uCDN about   changes/updates to certain capabilities with respect to a given   contract.   Given these semantics, it needs to be decided what exact capabilities   are useful and how these can be expressed.  Since the details of CDNI   contracts are not known at the time of this writing (and the CDNI   interface is better off being agnostic to these contracts anyway), it   remains to be seen what capabilities will be used to define   agreements between CDNs in practice.  One implication for   standardization could be to initially only specify a very limited set   of mandatory capabilities for advertisement and have, on top of that,Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   a flexible data model that allows exchanging additional capabilities   when needed.  Still, agreement needs to be reached regarding which   capabilities (if any) will be mandatory among CDNs.   It is not feasible to enumerate all the possible options for the   mandatory capabilities listed above (e.g., all the potential delivery   protocols or metadata options) or anticipate all the future needs for   additional capabilities.  FCI object extensibility is necessary to   support future capabilities, as well as a generic protocol for   conveying any capability information (e.g., with common encoding,   error handling, and security mechanisms; further requirements for the   CDNI FCI are listed in [RFC7337]).Seedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016Acknowledgments   Jan Seedorf is partially supported by the GreenICN project   (GreenICN: Architecture and Applications of Green Information Centric   Networking), a research project supported jointly by the European   Commission under its 7th Framework Program (contract no. 608518) and   the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology   (NICT) in Japan (contract no. 167).  The views and conclusions   contained herein are those of the authors and should not be   interpreted as necessarily representing the official policies or   endorsements, either expressed or implied, of the GreenICN project,   the European Commission, or NICT.   Martin Stiemerling provided initial input to this document and   valuable comments to the ongoing discussions among the authors of   this document.  Thanks to Francois Le Faucheur and Scott Wainner for   providing valuable comments and suggestions for the text.Authors' Addresses   Jan Seedorf   HFT Stuttgart - University of Applied Sciences Stuttgart   Schellingstrasse 24   Stuttgart  70174   Germany   Phone: +49-0711-8926-2801   Email: jan.seedorf@hft-stuttgart.de   Jon Peterson   NeuStar   1800 Sutter St. Suite 570   Concord, CA  94520   United States of America   Email: jon.peterson@neustar.bizSeedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 8008        CDNI RR Footprint/Capabilities Semantics   December 2016   Stefano Previdi   Cisco Systems   Via Del Serafico 200   Rome  0144   Italy   Email: sprevidi@cisco.com   Ray van Brandenburg   TNO   Anna van Buerenplein 1   The Hague  2595DA   The Netherlands   Phone: +31-88-866-7000   Email: ray.vanbrandenburg@tno.nl   Kevin J. Ma   Ericsson   43 Nagog Park   Acton, MA  01720   United States of America   Phone: +1-978-844-5100   Email: kevin.j.ma@ericsson.comSeedorf, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 31]

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