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PROPOSED STANDARD
Network Working Group                                      C. VillamizarRequest for Comments: 2769                                 Avici SystemsCategory: Standards Track                                C. Alaettinoglu                                                             R. Govindan                                                                     ISI                                                                D. Meyer                                                                   Cisco                                                           February 2000Routing Policy System ReplicationStatus of this Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.   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.Abstract   The RIPE database specifications and RPSL define languages used as   the basis for representing information in a routing policy system.  A   repository for routing policy system information is known as a   routing registry.  A routing registry provides a means of exchanging   information needed to address many issues of importance to the   operation of the Internet.  The implementation and deployment of a   routing policy system must maintain some degree of integrity to be of   any use.  The Routing Policy System Security RFC [3] addresses the   need to assure integrity of the data by proposing an authentication   and authorization model.  This document addresses the need to   distribute data over multiple repositories and delegate authority for   data subsets to other repositories without compromising the   authorization model established in Routing Policy System Security   RFC.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000Table of Contents1  Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32  Data Representation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43  Authentication and Authorization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54  Repository Hierarchy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .65  Additions to RPSL  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .65.1  repository object . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .75.2  delegated attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .95.3  integrity attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .106  Interactions with a Repository or Mirror . . . . . . . . . . .116.1  Initial Transaction Submission  . . . . . . . . . . . . .126.2  Redistribution of Transactions  . . . . . . . . . . . . .126.3  Transaction Commit and Confirmation . . . . . . . . . . .12   7  Data Format Summaries, Transaction Encapsulation and Processing 137.1  Transaction Submit and Confirm  . . . . . . . . . . . . .137.2  Redistribution of Transactions  . . . . . . . . . . . . .167.3  Redistribution Protocol Description . . . . . . . . . . .167.3.1 Explicitly Requesting Transactions  . . . . . . . .217.3.2 Heartbeat Processing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .227.4  Transaction Commit  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .237.5  Database Snapshot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .247.6  Authenticating Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25A  Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27A.1  Initial Object Submission and Redistribution  . . . . . .27A.2  Transaction Redistribution Encoding . . . . . . . . . . .29A.3  Transaction Protocol Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31A.4  Transaction Redistribution  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32B  Technical Discussion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35B.1  Server Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35B.1.1 getting connected . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35B.1.2 rolling transaction logs forward and back . . . . .35B.1.3 committing or disposing of transactions . . . . . .36B.1.4 dealing with concurrency  . . . . . . . . . . . . .36B.2  Repository Mirroring for Redundancy . . . . . . . . . . .36B.3  Trust Relationships . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37B.4  A Router as a Minimal Mirror  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38B.5  Dealing with Errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38C  Deployment Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39D  Privacy of Contact Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39   References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40   Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41   Full Copyright Statement  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 20001  Overview   A routing registry must maintain some degree of integrity to be of   any use.  The IRR is increasingly used for purposes that have a   stronger requirement for data integrity and security.  There is also   a desire to further decentralize the IRR. This document proposes a   means of decentralizing the routing registry in a way that is   consistent with the usage of the IRR and which avoids compromising   data integrity and security even if the IRR is distributed among less   trusted repositories.   Two methods of authenticating the routing registry information have   been proposed.   authorization and authentication checks on transactions:  The      integrity of the routing registry data is insured by repeating      authorization checks as transactions are processed.  As      transactions are flooded each remote registry has the option to      repeat the authorization and authentication checks.  This scales      with the total number of changes to the registry regardless of how      many registries exist.  When querying, the integrity of the      repository must be such that it can be trusted.  If an      organization is unwilling to trust any of the available      repositories or mirrors they have the option to run their own      mirror and repeat authorization checks at that mirror site.      Queries can then be directed to a mirror under their own      administration which presumably can be trusted.   signing routing registry objects:  An alternate which appears on the      surface to be attractive is signing the objects themselves.      Closer examination reveals that the approach of signing objects by      itself is flawed and when used in addition to signing transactions      and rechecking authorizations as changes are made adds nothing.      In order for an insertion of critical objects such as inetnums and      routes to be valid, authorization checks must be made which allow      the insertion.  The objects on which those authorization checks      are made may later change.  In order to later repeat the      authorization checks the state of other objects, possibly in other      repositories would have to be known.  If the repository were not      trusted then the change history on the object would have to be      traced back to the object's insertion.  If the repository were not      trusted, the change history of any object that was depended upon      for authorization would also have to be rechecked.  This trace      back would have to go back to the epoch or at least to a point      where only trusted objects were being relied upon for the      authorizations.  If the depth of the search is at all limited,      authorization could be falsified simply by exceeding the search      depth with a chain of authorization references back to falsifiedVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000      objects.  This would be grossly inefficient.  Simply verifying      that an object is signed provides no assurance that addition of      the object addition was properly authorized.   A minor distinction is made between a repository and a mirror.  A   repository has responsibility for the initial authorization and   authentication checks for transactions related to its local objects   which are then flooded to adjacent repositories.  A mirror receives   flooded transactions from remote repositories but is not the   authoritative source for any objects.  From a protocol standpoint,   repositories and mirrors appear identical in the flooding topology.   Either a repository or a mirror may recheck all or a subset of   transactions that are flooded to it.  A repository or mirror may   elect not to recheck authorization and authentication on transactions   received from a trusted adjacency on the grounds that the adjacent   repository is trusted and would not have flooded the information   unless authorization and authentication checks had been made.   If it can be arranged that all adjacencies are trusted for a given   mirror, then there is no need to implement the code to check   authorization and authentication.  There is only a need to be able to   check the signatures on the flooded transactions of the adjacent   repository.  This is an important special case because it could allow   a router to act as a mirror.  Only changes to the registry database   would be received through flooding, which is a very low volume.  Only   the signature of the adjacent mirror or repository would have to be   checked.2  Data Representation   RPSL provides a complete description of the contents of a routing   repository [1].  Many RPSL data objects remain unchanged from the   RIPE, and RPSL references the RIPE-181 specification as recorded inRFC-1786 [2].  RPSL provides external data representation.  Data may   be stored differently internal to a routing registry.  The integrity   of the distributed registry data requires the use of the   authorization and authentication additions to RPSL described in [3].   Some additions to RPSL are needed to locate all of the repositories   after having located one of them and to make certain parameters   selectable on a per repository basis readily available.  These   additions are described inSection 5.   Some form of encapsulation must be used to exchange data.  The de-   facto encapsulation has been that which the RIPE tools accept, a   plain text file or plain text in the body of anRFC-822 formatted   mail message with information needed for authentication derived fromVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   the mail headers.  Merit has slightly modified this using the PGP   signed portion of a plain text file or PGP signed portion of the body   of a mail message.   The exchange that occurs during flooding differs from the initial   submission.  In order to repeat the authorization checks the state of   all repositories containing objects referenced by the authorization   checks needs to be known.  To accomplish this a sequence number is   associated with each transaction in a repository and the flooded   transactions must contain the sequence number of each repository on   which authorization of the transaction depends.   In order to repeat authorization checks it must be possible to   retrieve back revisions of objects.  How this is accomplished is a   matter local to the implementation.  One method which is quite simple   is to keep the traversal data structures to all current objects even   if the state is deleted, keep the sequence number that the version of   the object became effective and keep back links to prior versions of   the objects.  Finding a prior version of an object involves looking   back through the references until the sequence number of the version   of the object is less than or equal to the sequence number being   searched for.   The existing very simple forms of encapsulation are adequate for the   initial submission of a database transaction and should be retained   as long as needed for backward compatibility.  A more robust   encapsulation and submission protocol, with optional confirmation is   defined inSection 6.1.  An encapsulation suitable for exchange of   transaction between repositories is addressed inSection 6.  Query   encapsulation and protocol is outside the scope of this document.3  Authentication and Authorization   Control must be exercised over who can make changes and what changes   they can make.  The distinction of who vs what separates   authentication from authorization.   o  Authentication is the means to determine who is attempting to make      a change.   o  Authorization is the determination of whether a transaction      passing a specific authentication check is allowed to perform a      given operation.   A submitted transaction contains a claimed identity.  Depending on   the type of transaction, the authorization will depend on related   objects.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   The "mnt-by", "mnt-routes", or "mnt-lower" attributes in those   related objects reference "maintainer" objects.  Those maintainer   objects contain "auth" attributes.  The auth attributes contain an   authorization method and data which generally contains the claimed   identity and some form of public encryption key used to authenticate   the claim.   Authentication is done on transactions.  Authentication should also   be done between repositories to insure the integrity of the   information exchange.  In order to comply with import, export, and   use restrictions throughout the world no encryption capability is   specified.  Transactions must not be encrypted because it may be   illegal to use decryption software in some parts of the world.4  Repository Hierarchy   With multiple repositories, "repository" objects are needed to   propagate the existence of new repositories and provide an automated   means to determine the supported methods of access and other   characteristics of the repository.  The repository object is   described inSection 5.   In each repository there should be a special repository object named   ROOT. This should point to the root repository or to a higher level   repository.  This is to allow queries to be directed to the local   repository but refer to the full set of registries for resolution of   hierarchically allocated objects.   Each repository may have an "expire" attribute.  The expire attribute   is used to determine if a repository must be updated before a local   transaction that depends on it can proceed.   The repository object also contains attributes describing the access   methods and supported authentication methods of the repository.  The   "query-address" attribute provides a host name and a port number used   to direct queries.  The "response-auth-type" attribute provides the   authentication types that may be used by the repository when   responding to queries.  The "submit-address" attribute provides a   host name and a port number used to submit objects to the repository.   The "submit-auth-type" attribute provides the authentication types   that may be used by the repository when responding to submissions.5  Additions to RPSL   There are very few additions to RPSL defined here.  The additions to   RPSL are referred to as RPSL "objects".  They reside in the   repository database and can be retrieved with ordinary queries.   Objects consist of "attributes", which are name/value pairs.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   Attributes may be mandatory or optional.  They may be single or   multiple.  One or more attributes may be part of a key field.  Some   attributes may have the requirement of being unique.   Most of the data formats described in this document are   encapsulations used in transaction exchanges.  These are referred to   as "meta-objects".  These "meta-objects", unlike RPSL "objects" do   not reside in the database but some must be retained in a transaction   log.  A similar format is used to represent "meta-objects".  They   also consist of "attributes" which are name/value pairs.   This section contains all of the additions to RPSL described in this   document.  This section describes only RPSL objects.  Other sections   described only meta-objects.5.1  repository object   A root repository must be agreed upon.  Ideally such a repository   would contain only top level delegations and pointers to other   repositories used in these delegations.  It would be wise to allow   only cryptographically strong transactions in the root repository   [3].   The root repository contains references to other repositories.  An   object of the following form identifies another repository.     repository:         RIPE     query-address:      whois://whois.ripe.net     response-auth-type: PGPKEY-23F5CE35 # pointer to key-cert object     response-auth-type: none     remarks:            you can request rsa signature on queries     remarks:            PGP required on submissions     submit-address:     mailto://auto-dbm@ripe.net     submit-address:     rps-query://whois.ripe.net:43     submit-auth-type:   pgp-key, crypt-pw, mail-from     remarks:            these are the authentication types supported     mnt-by:             maint-ripe-db     expire:             0000 04:00:00     heartbeat-interval: 0000 01:00:00     ...     remarks:            admin and technical contact, etc     source:             IANAVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   The attributes of the repository object are listed below.     repository      key  mandatory  single     query-address        mandatory  multiple     response-auth-type   mandatory  multiple     submit-address       mandatory  multiple     submit-auth-type     mandatory  multiple     repository-cert      mandatory  multiple     expire               mandatory  single     heartbeat-interval   mandatory  single     descr                optional   multiple     remarks              optional   multiple     admin-c              mandatory  multiple     tech-c               mandatory  multiple     notify               optional   multiple     mnt-by               mandatory  multiple     changed              mandatory  multiple     source               mandatory  single   In the above object type only a small number of the attribute types   are new.  These are:   repository  This attribute provides the name of the repository.  This      is the key field for the object and is single and must be globally      unique.  This is the same name used in the source attribute of all      objects in that repository.   query-address  This attribute provides a url for directing queries.      "rps-query" or "whois" can be used as the protocol identifier.   response-auth-type  This attribute provides an authentication type      that may be used by the repository when responding to user      queries.  Its syntax and semantics is same as the auth attribute      of the maintainer class.   submit-address  This attribute provides a url for submitting objects      to the repository.   submit-auth-type  This attribute provides the authentication types      that are allowed by the repository for users when submitting      registrations.   repository-cert  This attribute provides a reference to a public key      certificate in the form of an RPSL key-cert object.  This      attribute can be multiple to allow the repository to use more than      one method of signature.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   heartbeat-interval  Heartbeat meta-objects are sent by this      repository at the rate of one heartbeat meta-object per the      interval indicated.  The value of this attribute shall be      expressed in the form "dddd hh:mm:ss", where the "dddd" represents      days, "hh" represents hours, "mm" minutes and "ss" seconds.   expire  If no heartbeat or new registrations are received from a      repository for expire period, objects from this repository should      be considered non-authoritative, and cannot be used for      authorization purposes.  The value of this attribute shall be      expressed in the form "dddd hh:mm:ss", where the "dddd" represents      days, "hh" represents hours, "mm" minutes and "ss" seconds.  This      value should be bigger than heartbeat-interval.   Please note that the "heartbeat" meta-objects mentioned above, like   other meta-objects described in this document are part of the   protocol to exchange information but are not placed in the database   itself.  SeeSection 7.3.2 for a description of the heartbeat meta-   object.   The remaining attributes in the repository object are defined in   RPSL.5.2  delegated attribute   For many RPSL object types a particular entry should appear only in   one repository.  These are the object types for which there is a   natural hierarchy, "as-block", "aut-num", "inetnum", and "route".  In   order to facilitate putting an object in another repository, a   "delegated" attribute is added.   delegated  The delegated attribute is allowed in any object type with      a hierarchy.  This attribute indicates that further searches for      object in the hierarchy must be made in one or more alternate      repositories.  The current repository may be listed.  The ability      to list more than one repository serves only to accommodate      grandfathered objects (those created prior to using an      authorization model).  The value of a delegated attribute is a      list of repository names.   If an object contains a "delegated" attribute, an exact key field   match of the object may also be contained in each repository listed   in the "delegated" attribute.  For the purpose of authorizing changes   only the "mnt-by" in the object in the repository being modified is   considered.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   The following is an example of the use of a "delegated" attribute.     inetnum:        193.0.0.0 - 193.0.0.255     delegated:      RIPE     ...     source:         IANA   This inetnum simply delegates the storage of any more specific   inetnum objects overlapping the stated range to the RIPE repository.   An exact match of this inetnum may also exist in the RIPE repository   to provide hooks for the attributes referencing maintainer objects.   In this case, when adding objects to the RIPE repository, the "mnt-   lower", "mnt-routes", and "mnt-by" fields in the IANA inetnum object   will not be considered, instead the values in the RIPE copy will be   used.5.3  integrity attribute   The "integrity" attribute can be contained in any RPSL object.  It is   intended solely as a means to facilitate a transition period during   which some data has been moved from repositories prior to the use of   a strong authorization model and is therefore questionable, or when   some repositories are not properly checking authorization.   The "integrity" attribute may have the values "legacy", "no-auth",   "auth-failed", or "authorized".  If absent, the integrity is   considered to be "authorized".  The integrity values have the   following meanings:   legacy:  This data existed prior to the use of an adequate      authorization model.  The data is highly suspect.   no-auth:  This data was added to a repository during an initial      transition use of an authorization model but authorization      depended on other objects whose integrity was not "authorized".      Such an addition is being allowed during the transition but would      be disallowed later.   auth-failed:  The authoritative repository is not checking      authorization.  Had it been doing so, authorization would have      failed.  This attribute may be added by a repository that is      mirroring before placing the object in its local storage, or can      add this attribute to an encapsulating meta-object used to further      propagate the transaction.  If the failure to enforce      authorization is intentional and part of a transition (for      example, issuing warnings only), then the authoritative repository      may add this attribute to the encapsulating meta-object used to      further propagate the transaction.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   authorized:  Authorization checks were passed.  The maintainer      contained a "referral-by" attribute, a form of authentication      deemed adequate by the repository was used, and all objects that      were needed for authorization were objects whose integrity was      "authorized".   Normally once an object is added to a repository another object   cannot overwrite it unless authorized to do so by the maintainers   referenced by the "mnt-by" attributes in the object itself.  If the   integrity attribute is anything but "authorized", an object can be   overwritten or deleted by any transaction that would have been a   properly authorized addition had the object of lesser integrity not   existed.   During such a transition grandfathered data and data added without   proper authorization becomes advisory until a properly authorized   addition occurs.  After transition additions of this type would no   longer be accepted.  Those objects already added without proper   authorization would remain but would be marked as candidates for   replacement.6  Interactions with a Repository or Mirror   This section presents an overview of the transaction distribution   mechanisms.  The detailed format of the meta-objects for   encapsulating and distributing transactions, and the rules for   processing meta-objects are described inSection 7.  There are a few   different types of interactions between routing repositories or   mirrors.   Initial submission of transactions:  Transactions may include      additions, changes, and deletions.  A transaction may operate on      more than one object and must be treated as an atomic operation.      By definition initial submission of transactions is not applicable      to a mirror.  Initial submission of transactions is described inSection 6.1.   Redistribution of Transactions:  The primary purpose of the      interactions between registries is the redistribution of      transactions.  There are a number of ways to redistribute      transactions.  This is discussed inSection 6.2.   Queries:  Query interactions are outside the scope of this document.   Transaction Commit and Confirmation:  Repositories may optionally      implement a commit protocol and a completion indication that gives      the submitter of a transaction a response that indicates that aVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000      transaction has been successful and will not be lost by a crash of      the local repository.  A submitter may optionally request such a      confirmation.  This is discussed inSection 6.3.6.1  Initial Transaction Submission   The simplest form of transaction submission is an object or set of   objects submitted withRFC-822 email encapsulation.  This form is   still supported for backwards compatibility.  A preferred form allows   some meta-information to be included in the submission, such as a   preferred form of confirmation.  Where either encapsulation is used,   the submitter will connect to a host and port specified in the   repository object.  This allows immediate confirmation.  If an email   interface similar to the interface provided by the existing RIPE code   is desired, then an external program can provide the email interface.   The encapsulation of a transaction submission and response is   described in detail inSection 7.6.2  Redistribution of Transactions   Redistribution of transactions can be accomplished using one of:   1. A repository snapshot is a request for the complete contents of a      given repository.  This is usually done when starting up a new      repository or mirror or when recovering from a disaster, such as a      disk crash.   2. A transaction sequence exchange is a request for a specific set of      transactions.  Often the request is for the most recent sequence      number known to a mirror to the last transactions.  This is used      in polling.   3. Transaction flooding is accomplished through a unicast adjacency.   This section describes the operations somewhat qualitatively.  Data   formats and state diagrams are provided inSection 7.6.3  Transaction Commit and Confirmation   If a submission requires a strong confirmation of completion, or if a   higher degree of protection against false positive confirmation is   desired as a matter of repository policy, a commit may be performed.   A commit request is a request from the repository processing an   initial transaction submission to another repository to confirm that   they have been able to advance the transaction sequence up to theVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   sequence number immediately below the transaction in the request and   are willing to accept the transaction in the request as a further   advance in the sequence.  This indicates that either the   authorization was rechecked by the responding repository and passed   or that the responding repository trusts the requesting repository   and has accepted the transaction.   A commit request can be sent to more than one alternate repository.   One commit completion response is sufficient to respond to the   submitter with a positive confirmation that the transaction has been   completed.  However, the repository or submitter may optionally   require more than one.7  Data Format Summaries, Transaction Encapsulation and Processing   RIPE-181 [2] and RPSL [1] data is represented externally as ASCII   text.  Objects consist of a set of attributes.  Attributes are   name/value pairs.  A single attribute is represented as a single line   with the name followed by a colon followed by whitespace characters   (space, tab, or line continuation) and followed by the value.  Within   a value all consecutive whitespace characters is equivalent to a   single space.  Line continuation is supported by putting a white   space or '+' character to the beginning of the continuation lines.   An object is externally represented as a sequence of attributes.   Objects are separated by blank lines.   Protocol interactions between registries are activated by passing   "meta objects".  Meta objects are not part of RPSL but conform to   RPSL object representation.  They serve mostly as delimiters to the   protocol messages or to carry the request for an operation.7.1  Transaction Submit and Confirm   The de-facto method for submitting database changes has been via   email.  This method should be supported by an external application.   Merit has added the pgp-from authentication method to the RADB   (replaced by "pgpkey" in [4]), where the mail headers are essentially   ignored and the body of the mail message must be PGP signed.   This specification defines a different encapsulation for transaction   submission.  When submitting a group of objects to a repository, a   user MUST append to that group of objects, exactly one "timestamp"   and one or more "signature" meta-objects, in that order.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   The "timestamp" meta-object contains a single attribute:   timestamp  This attribute is mandatory and single-valued.  This      attribute specifies the time at which the user submits the      transaction to the repository.  The format of this attribute is      "YYYYMMDD hh:mm:ss [+/-]xx:yy", where "YYYY" specifies the four      digit year, "MM" represents the month, "DD" the date, "hh" the      hour, "mm" the minutes, "ss" the seconds of the timestamp, and      "xx" and "yy" represents the hours and minutes respectively that      that timestamp is ahead or behind UTC.   A repository may reject a transaction which does not include the   "timestamp" meta-object.  The timestamp object is used to prevent   replaying registrations.  How this is actually used is a local   matter.  For example, a repository can accept a transaction only if   the value of the timestamp attribute is greater than the timestamp   attribute in the previous registration received from this user   (maintainer), or the repository may only accept transactions with   timestamps within its expire window.   Each "signature" meta-object contains a single attribute:   signature  This attribute is mandatory and single-valued.  This      attribute, a block of free text, contains the signature      corresponding to the authentication method used for the      transaction.  When the authentication method is a cryptographic      hash (as in PGP-based authentication), the signature must include      all text up to (but not including) the last blank line before the      first "signature" meta-object.   A repository must reject a transaction that does not include any   "signature" meta-object.   The group of objects submitted by the user, together with the   "timestamp" and "signature" meta-objects, constitute the "submitted   text" of the transaction.   The protocol used for submitting a transaction, and for receiving   confirmation of locally committed transactions, is not specified in   this document.  This protocol may define additional encapsulations   around the submitted text.  The rest of this section gives an example   of one such protocol.  Implementations are free to choose another   encapsulation.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   The meta-objects "transaction-submit-begin" and "transaction-submit-   end" delimit a transaction.  A transaction is handled as an atomic   operation.  If any part of the transaction fails none of the changes   take effect.  For this reason a transaction can only operate on a   single database.   A socket connection is used to request queries or submit   transactions.  An email interface may be provided by an external   program that connects to the socket.  A socket connection must use   the "transaction-submit-begin" and "transaction-submit-end"   delimiters but can request a legacy style confirmation.  Multiple   transactions may be sent prior to the response for any single   transaction.  Transactions may not complete in the order sent.   The "transaction-submit-begin" meta-object may contain the following   attributes.   transaction-submit-begin  This attribute is mandatory and single.      The value of the attribute contains name of the database and an      identifier that must be unique over the course of the socket      connection.   response-auth-type  This attribute is optional and multiple.  The      remainder of the line specifies an authentication type that would      be acceptable in the response.  This is used to request a response      cryptographically signed by the repository.   transaction-confirm-type  This attribute is optional and single.  A      confirmation type keyword must be provided.  Keywords are "none",      "legacy", "normal", "commit".  The confirmation type can be      followed by the option "verbose".   The "transaction-submit-end meta-object consists of a single   attribute by the same name.  It must contain the same database name   and identifier as the corresponding "transaction-submit-begin"   attribute.   Unless the confirmation type is "none" a confirmation is sent.  If   the confirmation type is "legacy", then an email message of the form   currently sent by the RIPE database code will be returned on the   socket (suitable for submission to the sendmail program).   A "normal" confirmation does not require completion of the commit   protocol.  A "commit" confirmation does.  A "verbose" confirmation   may contain additional detail.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   A transaction confirmation is returned as a "transaction-confirm"   meta-object.  The "transaction-confirm" meta-object may have the   following attributes.   transaction-confirm  This attribute is mandatory and single.  It      contains the database name and identifier associated with the      transaction.   confirmed-operation  This attribute is optional and multiple.  It      contains one of the keywords "add", "delete" or "modify" followed      by the object type and key fields of the object operated on.   commit-status  This attribute is mandatory and single.  It contains      one of the keywords "succeeded, "error", or "held".  The "error"      keyword may be followed by an optional text string.  The "held"      keyword is returned when a repository containing a dependent      object for authorization has expired.7.2  Redistribution of Transactions   In order to redistribute transactions, each repository maintains a   TCP connection with one or more other repositories.  After locally   committing a submitted transaction, a repository assigns a sequence   number to the transaction, signs and encapsulates the transaction,   and then sends one copy to each neighboring (or "peer") repository.   In turn, each repository authenticates the transaction (as described   inSection 7.6), may re-sign the transaction and redistributes the   transaction to its neighbors.  We use the term "originating   repository" to distinguish the repository that redistributes a   locally submitted transaction.   This document also specifies two other methods for redistributing   transactions to other repositories:  a database snapshot format used   for initializing a new registry, and a polling technique used by   mirrors.   In this section, we first describe how a repository may encapsulate   the submitted text of a transaction.  We then describe the protocol   for flooding transactions or polling for transactions, and the   database snapshot contents and format.7.3  Redistribution Protocol Description   The originating repository must first authenticate a submitted   transaction using methods described in [3].Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   Before redistributing a transaction, the originating repository must   encapsulate the submitted text of the transaction with several meta-   objects, which are described below.   The originating repository must prepend the submitted text with   exactly one "transaction-label" meta-object.  This meta-object   contains the following attributes:   transaction-label  This attribute is mandatory and single.  The value      of this attribute conforms to the syntax of an RPSL word, and      represents a globally unique identifier for the database to which      this transaction is added.   sequence  This attribute is mandatory and single.  The value of this      attribute is an RPSL integer specifying the sequence number      assigned by the originating repository to the transaction.      Successive transactions distributed by the same originating      repository have successive sequence numbers.  The first      transaction originated by a registry is assigned a sequence number      1.  Each repository must use sequence numbers drawn from a range      at least as large as 64 bit unsigned integers.   timestamp  This attribute is mandatory and single-valued.  This      attribute specifies the time at which the originating repository      encapsulates the submitted text.  The format of this attribute is      "YYYYMMDD hh:mm:ss [+/-]xx:yy", where "YYYY" specifies the four      digit year, "MM" represents the month, "DD" the date, "hh" the      hour, "mm" the minutes, "ss" the seconds of the timestamp, and      "xx" and "yy" represents the hours and minutes respectively that      that timestamp is ahead or behind UTC.   integrity  This attribute is optional and single-valued.  It may have      the values "legacy", "no-auth", "auth-failed", or "authorized".      If absent, the integrity is considered to be "authorized".   The originating repository may append to the submitted text one or   more "auth-dependency" meta-objects.  These meta-objects are used to   indicate which other repositories' objects were used by the   originating registry to authenticate the submitted text.  The "auth-   dependency" meta-objects should be ordered from the most preferred   repository to the least preferred repository.  This order is used by   a remote repository to tie break between the multiple registrations   of an object with the same level of integrity.  The "auth-dependency"   meta-object contains the following attributes:   auth-dependency  This attribute mandatory and single-valued.  It      equals a repository name from which an object is used to      authorize/authenticate this transaction.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   sequence  This attribute mandatory and single-valued.  It equals the      transaction sequence number of the dependent repository known at      the originating repository at the time of processing this      transaction.   timestamp  This attribute mandatory and single-valued.  It equals the      timestamp of the dependent repository known at the originating      repository at the time of processing this transaction.   If the originating repository needs to modify submitted objects in a   way that the remote repositories can not re-create, it can append an   "override-objects" meta-object followed by the modified versions of   these objects.  An example modification can be auto assignment of NIC   handles.  The "override-objects" meta-object contains the following   attributes:   override-objects  A free text remark.   Other repositories may or may not honor override requests, or limit   the kinds of overrides they allow.   Following this, the originating repository must append exactly one   "repository-signature" meta-object.  The "repository-signature"   meta-object contains the following attributes:   repository-signature  This attribute is mandatory and single-valued.      It contains the name of the repository.   integrity  This attribute is optional and single-valued.  It may have      the values "legacy", "no-auth", "auth-failed", or "authorized".      If absent, the value is same as the value in the transaction-      label.  If a different value is used, the value here takes      precedence.   signature  This attribute is optional and single-valued.  This      attribute, a block of free text, contains the repository's      signature using the key in the repository-cert attribute of the      repository object.  When the authentication method is a      cryptographic hash (as in PGP-based authentication), the signature      must include all text upto (but not including) this attribute.      That is, the "repository-signature" and "integrity" attributes of      this object are included.  This attribute is optional since      cryptographic authentication may not be available everywhere.      However, its use where it is available is highly recommended.   A repository must reject a redistributed transaction that does not   include any "repository-signature" meta-object.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   The transaction-label, the submitted text, the dependency objects,   the override-objects, the overridden objects, and the repository's   signature together constitute what we call the "redistributed text".   In preparation for redistributing the transaction to other   repositories, the originating repository must perform the following   protocol encapsulation.  This protocol encapsulation may involve   transforming the redistributed text according to one of the   "transfer-method"s described below.   The transformed redistributed text is first prepended with exactly   one "transaction-begin" meta-object.  One newline character separates   this meta-object from the redistributed text.  This meta-object has   the following attributes:   transaction-begin  This attribute is mandatory and single.  The value      of this attribute is the length, in bytes, of the transformed      redistributed text.   transfer-method  This attribute is optional and single-valued.  Its      value is either "gzip", or "plain".  The value of the attribute      describes the kind of text encoding that the repository has      performed on the redistributed text.  If this attribute is not      specified, its value is assumed to be "plain".  An implementation      must be capable of encoding and decoding both of these types.   The "transaction-begin" meta-object and the transformed redistributed   text constitute what we call the "transmitted text".  The originating   repository may distribute the transmitted text to one or more peer   repositories.   When a repository receives the transmitted text of a transaction, it   must perform the following steps.  After performing the following   steps, a transaction may be marked successful or failed.   1. It must decapsulate the "transaction-begin" meta-object, then      decode the original redistributed text according to the value of      the transfer-method attribute specified in the "transaction-begin"      meta-object.   2. It should then extract the "transaction-label" meta-object from      the transmitted text.  If this transaction has already been      processed, or is currently being held, the repository must      silently discard this incarnation of the same transaction.   3. It should verify that the signature of the originating repository      matches the first "repository-signature" meta-object in the      redistributed text following the "auth-dependency" meta-objects.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   4. If not all previous (i.e., those with a lower sequence number)      transactions from the same repository have been received or      completely processed, the repository must "hold" this transaction.   5. It may check whether any subsequent "repository-signature" meta-      objects were appended by a trusted repository.  If so, this      indicates that the trusted repository verified the transaction's      integrity and marked its conclusion in the integrity attribute of      this object.  The repository may verify the trusted repositories      signature and also mark the transaction with the same integrity,      and skip the remaining steps.   6. It should verify the syntactic correctness of the transaction.  An      implementation may allow configurable levels of syntactic      conformance with RPSL [1].  This enables RPSL extensions to be      incrementally deployed in the distributed registry scheme.   7. The repository must authorize and authenticate this transaction.      To do this, it may need to reference objects and transactions from      other repositories.  If these objects are not available, the      repository must "hold" this transaction as described inSection7.6, until it can be authorized and authenticated later.  In order      to verify authorization/authentication of this transaction, the      repository must not use an object from a repository not mentioned      in an "auth-dependency" meta-object.  The repository should also      only use the latest objects (by rolling back to earlier versions      if necessary) which are within the transaction sequence numbers of      the "auth-dependency" meta-objects.   A non-originating repository must redistribute a failed transaction   in order not to cause a gap in the sequence.  (If the transaction was   to fail at the originating registry, it would simply not be assigned   a sequence number).   To the redistributed text of a transaction, a repository may append   another "repository-signature" meta-object.  This indicates that the   repository has verified the transaction's integrity and marked it in   the "integrity" attribute of this object.  The signature covers the   new redistributed text from (and including) the transaction-label   object to this object's signature attribute (including the   "repository-signature" and "integrity" attributes of this object, but   excluding the "signature" attribute).  The original redistributed   text, together with the new "repository-signature" meta-object   constitutes the modified redistributed text.   To redistribute a successful or failed transaction, the repository   must encapsulate the (original or modified) redistributed text with a   "transaction-begin" object.  This step is essentially the same asVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   that performed by the originating repository (except that the   repository is free to use a different "transfer-method" from the one   that was in the received transaction.7.3.1  Explicitly Requesting Transactions   A repository may also explicitly request one or more transactions   belonging to a specified originating repository.  This is useful for   catching up after a repository has been off-line for a period of   time.  It is also useful for mirrors which intermittently poll a   repository for recently received transactions.   To request a range of transactions from a peer, a repository must   send a "transaction-request" meta-object to the peer.  A   "transaction-request" meta-object may contain the following   attributes:   transaction-request  This attribute is mandatory and single.  It      contains the name of the database whose transactions are being      requested.   sequence-begin  This attribute is optional and single.  It contains      the sequence number of the first transaction being requested.   sequence-end  This attribute is optional and single.  It contains the      sequence number of the last transaction being requested.   Upon receiving a "transaction-request" object, a repository performs   the following actions.  If the "sequence-begin" attribute is not   specified, the repository assumes the request first sequence number   to be 1.  The last sequence number is the lesser of the value of the   "sequence-end" attributed and the highest completed transaction in   the corresponding database.  The repository then, in order, transmits   the requested range of transactions.  Each transaction is prepared   exactly according to the rules for redistribution specified inSection 7.3.   After transmitting all the transactions, the peer repository must   send a "transaction-response" meta-object.  This meta-object has the   following attributes:   transaction-response  This attribute is mandatory and single.  It      contains the name of the database whose transactions are were      requested.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   sequence-begin  This attribute is optional and mandatory.  It      contains the value of the "sequence-begin" attribute in the      original request.  It is omitted if the corresponding attribute      was not specified in the original request.   sequence-end  This attribute is optional and mandatory.  It contains      the value of the "sequence-end" attribute in the original request.      It is omitted if the corresponding attribute was not specified in      the original request.   After receiving a "transaction-response" meta-object, a repository   may tear down the TCP connection to its peer.  This is useful for   mirrors that intermittently resynchronize transactions with a   repository.  If the TCP connection stays open, repositories exchange   subsequent transactions according to the redistribution mechanism   specified in Section  7.3.  While a repository is responding to a   transaction-request, it MAY forward heartbeats and other transactions   from the requested repository towards the requestor.7.3.2  Heartbeat Processing   Each repository that has originated at least one transaction must   periodically send a "heartbeat" meta-object.  The interval between   two successive transmissions of this meta-object is configurable but   must be less than 1 day.  This meta-object serves to indicate the   liveness of a particular repository.  The repository liveness   determines how long transactions are held (SeeSection 7.6).   The "heartbeat" meta-object contains the following attributes:   heartbeat  This attribute is mandatory and single.  It contains the      name of the repository which originates this meta-object.   sequence  This attribute is mandatory and single.  It contains the      highest transaction sequence number that has been assigned by the      repository.   timestamp  This attribute is mandatory and single.  It contains the      time at which this meta-object was generated.  The format of this      attribute is "YYYYMMDD hh:mm:ss [+/-]xx:yy", where "YYYY"      specifies the four digit year, "MM" represents the month, "DD" the      date, "hh" the hour, "mm" the minutes, "ss" the seconds of the      timestamp, and "xx" and "yy" represents the hours and minutes      respectively that that timestamp is ahead or behind UTC.   Upon receiving a heartbeat meta-object, a repository must first check   the timestamp of the latest previously received heartbeat message.   If that timestamp exceeds the timestamp in the received heartbeatVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   message, the repository must silently discard the heartbeat message.   Otherwise, it must record the timestamp and sequence number in the   heartbeat message, and redistribute the heartbeat message, without   modification, to each of its peer repositories.   If the heartbeat message is from a repository previously unknown to   the recipient, the recipient may send a "transaction-request" to one   or more of its peers to obtain all transactions belonging to the   corresponding database.  If the heartbeat message contains a sequence   number higher than the highest sequence number processed by the   recipient, the recipient may send a "transaction-request" to one or   more of its peers to obtain all transactions belonging to the   corresponding database.7.4  Transaction Commit   Submitters may require stronger confirmation of commit for their   transactions (Section 6.3).  This section describes a simple   request-response protocol by which a repository may provide this   stronger confirmation, by verifying if one or more other repositories   have committed the transaction.  Implementation of this request-   response protocol is optional.   After it has redistributed a transaction, the originating repository   may request a commit confirmation from one or more peer repositories   by sending to them a "commit-request" meta-object.  The "commit-   request" contains two attributes:   commit-request  This attribute is mandatory and single.  It contains      the name of the database for whom a commit confirmation is being      requested.   sequence  This attribute is mandatory and single.  It contains the      transaction sequence number for which a commit confirmation is      being requested.   A repository that receives a "commit-request" must not redistribute   the request.  It must delay the response until the corresponding   transaction has been processed.  For this reason, the repository must   keep state about pending commit requests.  It should discard this   state if the connection to the requester is lost before the response   is sent.  In that event, it is the responsibility of the requester to   resend the request.   Once a transaction has been processed (Section 7.3), a repository   must check to see if there exists any pending commit request for the   transaction.  If so, it must send a "commit-response" meta-object to   the requester.  This meta-object has three attributes:Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   commit-response  This attribute is mandatory and single.  It contains      the name of the database for whom a commit response is being sent.   sequence  This attribute is mandatory and single.  It contains the      transaction sequence number for which a commit response is being      sent.   commit-status  This attribute is mandatory and single.  It contains      one of the keywords "held", "error", or "succeeded".  The "error"      keyword may be followed by an optional text string.  The "held"      keyword is returned when a repository containing a dependent      object for authorization has expired.7.5  Database Snapshot   A database snapshot provides a complete copy of a database.  It is   intended only for repository initialization or disaster recovery.  A   database snapshot is an out of band mechanism.  A set of files are   created periodically at the source repository.  These files are then   transferred to the requestor out of band (e.g.  ftp transfer).  The   objects in these files are then registered locally.   A snapshot of repository X contains the following set of files:   X.db  This file contains the RPSL objects of repository X, separated      by blank lines.  In addition to the RPSL objects and blank lines,      comment lines can be present.  Comment lines start with the      character '#'.  The comment lines are ignored.  The file X.db ends      in a special comment line "# eof".   X.<class>.db  This optional file if present contains the RPSL objects      in X.db that are of class <class>.  The format of the file is same      as that of X.db.   X.transaction-label  This file contains a transaction-label object      that records the timestamp and the latest sequence number of the      repository at the time of the snapshot.   Each of these files can be optionally compressed uzing gzip.  This is   signified by appending the suffix .gz to the file name.  Each of   these files can optionally be PGP signed.  In this case, the detached   signature with ASCII armoring and platform-independent text mode is   stored in a file whose name is constructed by appending .sig to the   file name of the file being signed.   In order to construct a repository's contents from a snapshot, a   repository downloads these files.  After uncompressing and checking   signatures, the repository records these objects in its database.  NoVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   RPS authorization/authentication is done on these objects.  The   transaction-label object provides the seed for the replication   protocol to receive the follow on transactions from this repository.   Hence, it is not crucial to download an up to the minute snapshot.   After successfully playing a snapshot, it is possible that a   repository may receive a transaction from a third repository that has   a dependency on an earlier version of one of the objects in the   snapshot.  This can only happen within the expire period of the   repository being downloaded, plus any possible network partition   period.  This dependency is only important if the repository wants to   re-verify RPS authorization/authentication.  There are three allowed   alternatives in this case.  The simplest alternative is for the   repository to accept the transaction and mark it with integrity "no-   auth".  The second choice is to only peer with trusted repositories   during this time period, and accept the transaction with the same   integrity as the trusted repository (possibly as "authorized").  The   most preferred alternative is not to download an up to the minute   snapshot, but to download an older snapshot, at minimum twice the   repositories expire time, in practice few days older.  Upon replaying   an older snapshot, the replication protocol will fetch the more   current transactions from this repository.  Together they provide the   necessary versions of objects to re-verify rps   authorization/authentication.7.6  Authenticating Operations   The "signature" and "repository-signature" meta-objects represent   signatures.  Where multiple of these objects are present, the   signatures should be over the original contents, not over other   signatures.  This allows signatures to be checked in any order.   A maintainer can also sign a transaction using several authentication   methods (some of which may be available in some repositories only).   In the case of PGP, implementations should allow the signatures of   the "signature" and "repository-signature" meta-objects to be either   the detached signatures produced by PGP or regular signatures   produced by PGP. In either case, ASCII armoring and platform-   independent text mode should be used.   Note that the RPSL objects themselves are not signed but the entire   transaction body is signed.  When exchanging transactions among   registries, the meta-objects (e.g.  "auth-dependency") prior to the   first "repository-signature" meta object in the redistributed text   are also signed over.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   Transactions must remain intact, including the signatures, even if an   authentication method provided by the submitter is not used by a   repository handling the message.  An originating repository may chose   to remove clear text passwords signatures from a transaction, and   replace it with the keyword "clear-text-passwd" followed by the   maintainer's id.     signature: clear-text-passwd <maintainer-name>   Note that this does not make the system less secure since clear text   password is an indication of total trust to the originating   repository by the maintainer.   A repository may sign a transaction that it verified.  If at any   point the signature of a trusted repository is encountered, no   further authorization or authentication is needed.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000A  Examples   RPSL provides an external representation of RPSL objects and   attributes.  An attribute is a name/value pair.  RPSL is line   oriented.  Line continuation is supported, however most attributes   fit on a single line.  The attribute name is followed by a colon,   then any amount of whitespace, then the attribute value.  An example   of the ASCII representation of an RPSL attribute is the following:       route:     140.222.0.0/16   An RPSL object is a set of attributes.  Objects are separated from   each other by one or more blank lines.  An example of a complete RPSL   object follows:       route:         140.222.0.0/16       descr:         ANS Communications       origin:        AS1673       member-of:     RS-ANSOSPFAGGREGATE       mnt-by:        ANS       changed:       tck@ans.net 19980115       source:        ANSA.1  Initial Object Submission and Redistribution   Figure 1 outlines the steps involved in submitting an object and the   initial redistribution from the authoritative registry to its flooding   peers.   If the authorization check requires objects from other repositories,   then the sequence numbers of the local copies of those databases is   required for mirrors to recheck the authorization.   To simply resubmit the object from the prior example, the submitter or   a client application program acting on the submitter's behalf must   submit a transaction.  The legacy method was to send PGP signed email.   The preferred method is for an interactive program to encapsulate a   request between "transaction-submit-begin" and   "transaction-submit-end" meta-objects and encapsulate that as a   signed block as in the following example:Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000    +--------------+    |  Transaction |    |  signed by   |    |  submitter   |    +--------------+           |           |  1           v    +---------------------+  2    |  Primary repository |---->+----------+    |  identified by      |     | database |    |  RPSL source        |<----+----------+    +---------------------+  3           |           |  4           v    +----------------+    |  Redistributed |    |  transaction   |    +----------------+    1.  submit object    2.  authorization check    3.  sequence needed for authorization    4.  redistribute   Figure 1:  Initial Object Submission and Redistribution    transaction-submit-begin:  ANS 1    response-auth-type:        PGP    transaction-confirm-type:  normal    route:         140.222.0.0/16    descr:         ANS Communications    origin:        AS1673    member-of:     RS-ANSOSPFAGGREGATE    mnt-by:        ANS    changed:       curtis@ans.net 19990401    source:        ANS    timestamp: 19990401 10:30:00 +08:00Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000    signature:    + -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----    + Version: PGP for Personal Privacy 5.0    + MessageID: UZi4b7kjlzP7rb72pATPywPxYfQj4gXI    +    + iQCVAwUANsrwkP/OhQ1cphB9AQFOvwP/Ts8qn3FRRLQQHKmQGzy2IxOTiF0QXB4U    + Xzb3gEvfeg8NWhAI32zBw/D6FjkEw7P6wDFDeok52A1SA/xdP5wYE8heWQmMJQLX    + Avf8W49d3CF3qzh59UC0ALtA5BjI3r37ubzTf3mgtw+ONqVJ5+lB5upWbqKN9zqv    + PGBIEN3/NlM=    + =c93c    + -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----    transaction-submit-end:    ANS 1   The signature covers the everything after the first blank line after   the "transaction-submit-begin" object to the last blank line before   the "signature" meta-object.  If multiple signatures are needed, it   would be quite easy to email this block and ask the other party to   add a signature-block and return or submit the transaction.  Because   of delay in obtaining multiple signatures the accuracy of the   "timestamp" cannot be strictly enforced.  Enforcing accuracy to   within the "expire" time of the database might be a reasonable   compromise.  The tradeoff is between convenience, allowing a longer   time to obtain multiple signatures, and increased time of exposure to   replay attack.   The ANS repository would look at its local database and make   authorization checks.  If the authorization passes, then the sequence   number of any other database needed for the authorization is   obtained.   If this operation was successful, then a confirmation would be   returned.  The confirmation would be of the form:    transaction-confirm:  ANS 1    confirmed-operation:  change route 140.222.0.0/16 AS1673    commit-status:        commit    timestamp:            19990401 10:30:10 +05:00A.2  Transaction Redistribution Encoding   Having passed the authorization check the transaction is given a   sequence number and stored in the local transaction log and is then   flooded.  The meta-object flooded to another database would be signed   by the repository and would be of the following form:Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000    transaction-label: ANS    sequence: 6666    timestamp: 19990401 13:30:10 +05:00    integrity: authorized    route:         140.222.0.0/16    descr:         ANS Communications    origin:        AS1673    member-of:     RS-ANSOSPFAGGREGATE    mnt-by:        ANS    changed:       curtis@ans.net 19990401    source:        ANS    timestamp: 19990401 10:30:00 +08:00    signature:    + -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----    + Version: PGP for Personal Privacy 5.0    + MessageID: UZi4b7kjlzP7rb72pATPywPxYfQj4gXI    +    + iQCVAwUANsrwkP/OhQ1cphB9AQFOvwP/Ts8qn3FRRLQQHKmQGzy2IxOTiF0QXB4U    + Xzb3gEvfeg8NWhAI32zBw/D6FjkEw7P6wDFDeok52A1SA/xdP5wYE8heWQmMJQLX    + Avf8W49d3CF3qzh59UC0ALtA5BjI3r37ubzTf3mgtw+ONqVJ5+lB5upWbqKN9zqv    + PGBIEN3/NlM=    + =c93c    + -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----    auth-dependency: ARIN    sequence: 555    timestamp: 19990401 13:30:08 +05:00    auth-dependency: RADB    sequence: 4567    timestamp: 19990401 13:27:54 +05:00    repository-signature: ANS    signature:    + -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----    + Version: PGP for Personal Privacy 5.0    + MessageID: UZi4b7kjlzP7rb72pATPywPxYfQj4gXI    +    + iQCVAwUANsrwkP/OhQ1cphB9AQFOvwP/Ts8qn3FRRLQQHKmQGzy2IxOTiF0QXB4U    + Xzb3gEvfeg8NWhAI32zBw/D6FjkEw7P6wDFDeok52A1SA/xdP5wYE8heWQmMJQLX    + Avf8W49d3CF3qzh59UC0ALtA5BjI3r37ubzTf3mgtw+ONqVJ5+lB5upWbqKN9zqv    + PGBIEN3/NlM=    + =c93c    + -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   Note that the repository-signature above is a detached signature for   another file and is illustrative only.  The repository-signature   covers from the "transaction-label" meta-object (including) to the   last blank line before the first "repository-signature" meta-object   (excluding the last blank line and the "repository-signature"   object).A.3  Transaction Protocol Encoding    transaction-begin: 1276    transfer-method: plain    transaction-label: ANS    sequence: 6666    timestamp: 19990401 13:30:10 +05:00    integrity: authorized    route:         140.222.0.0/16    descr:         ANS Communications    origin:        AS1673    member-of:     RS-ANSOSPFAGGREGATE    mnt-by:        ANS    changed:       curtis@ans.net 19990401    source:        ANS    timestamp: 19990401 10:30:00 +08:00    signature:    + -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----    + Version: PGP for Personal Privacy 5.0    + MessageID: UZi4b7kjlzP7rb72pATPywPxYfQj4gXI    +    + iQCVAwUANsrwkP/OhQ1cphB9AQFOvwP/Ts8qn3FRRLQQHKmQGzy2IxOTiF0QXB4U    + Xzb3gEvfeg8NWhAI32zBw/D6FjkEw7P6wDFDeok52A1SA/xdP5wYE8heWQmMJQLX    + Avf8W49d3CF3qzh59UC0ALtA5BjI3r37ubzTf3mgtw+ONqVJ5+lB5upWbqKN9zqv    + PGBIEN3/NlM=    + =c93c    + -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----    auth-dependency: ARIN    sequence: 555    timestamp: 19990401 13:30:08 +05:00    auth-dependency: RADB    sequence: 4567    timestamp: 19990401 13:27:54 +05:00Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000    repository-signature: ANS    signature:    + -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----    + Version: PGP for Personal Privacy 5.0    + MessageID: UZi4b7kjlzP7rb72pATPywPxYfQj4gXI    +    + iQCVAwUANsrwkP/OhQ1cphB9AQFOvwP/Ts8qn3FRRLQQHKmQGzy2IxOTiF0QXB4U    + Xzb3gEvfeg8NWhAI32zBw/D6FjkEw7P6wDFDeok52A1SA/xdP5wYE8heWQmMJQLX    + Avf8W49d3CF3qzh59UC0ALtA5BjI3r37ubzTf3mgtw+ONqVJ5+lB5upWbqKN9zqv    + PGBIEN3/NlM=    + =c93c    + -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----   Before the transaction is sent to a peer, the repository prepends a   "transaction-begin" meta-object.  The value of the "transaction-   begin" attribute is the number of octets in the transaction, not   counting the "transaction-begin" meta-object and the first blank line   after it.   Separating transaction-begin and transaction-label objects enables   different encodings at different flooding peerings.A.4  Transaction Redistribution   The last step in Figure 1 was redistributing the submitter's   transaction through flooding (or later through polling).  Figure 2   illustrates the further redistribution of the transaction.   If the authorization check was repeated, the mirror may optionally   add a repository-signature before passing the transaction any   further.  A "signature" can be added within that block.  The previous   signatures should not be signed.   Figure 3 illustrates the special case referred to as a "lightweight   mirror".  This is specifically intended for routers.   The lightweight mirror must trust the mirror from which it gets a   feed.  This is a safe assumption if the two are under the same   administration (the mirror providing the feed is a host owned by the   same ISP who owns the routers).  The lightweight mirror simply checks   the signature of the adjacent repository to insure data integrity.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000    +----------------+    |  Redistributed |    |  transaction   |    +----------------+           |           |  1           v    +--------------------+  2    |                    |---->+----------+    |  Mirror repository |     | database |    |                    |<----+----------+    +--------------------+  3           |           |  4           v    +------------------+    |+----------------+|    ||  Redistributed ||    ||  transaction   ||    |+----------------+|    |  Optional        |    |  signature       |    +------------------+    1.  redistribute transaction    2.  recheck authorization against full DB at the        time of the transaction using sequence numbers    3.  authorization pass/fail    4.  optionally sign then redistribute   Figure 2:  Further Transaction RedistributionVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000    +----------------+    |  Redistributed |    |  transaction   |    +----------------+           |  1           v    +--------------------+  2    |                    |---->+----------+    |  Mirror repository |     | database |    |                    |<----+----------+    +--------------------+  3           |  4           v    +----------------+    |  Redistributed |    |  transaction   |    +----------------+           |  5           v    +--------------------+    |  Lightweight       |  6  +----------+    |  Mirror repository |---->| database |    |  (router?)         |     +----------+    +--------------------+    1.  redistribute transaction    2.  recheck authorization against full DB at the        time of the transaction using sequence numbers    3.  authorization pass/fail    4.  sign and redistribute    5.  just check mirror signature    6.  apply change with no authorization check   Figure 3:  Redistribution to Lightweight MirrorsVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000B  Technical DiscussionB.1  Server Processing   This document does not mandate any particular software design,   programming language choice, or underlying database or underlying   operating system.  Examples are given solely for illustrative   purposes.B.1.1  getting connected   There are two primary methods of communicating with a repository   server.  E-mail can be sent to the server.  This method may be   deprecated but at least needs to be supported during transition.  The   second method is preferred, connect directly to a TCP socket.   Traditionally the whois service is supported for simple queries.  It   might be wise to retain the whois port connection solely for simple   queries and use a second port not in the reserved number space for   all other operations including queries except those queries using the   whois unstructured single line query format.   There are two styles of handling connection initiation is the   dedicated daemon, in the style of BSD sendmail, or launching through   a general purpose daemon such as BSD inetd.  E-mail is normally   handled sequentially and can be handled by a front end program which   will make the connection to a socket in the process as acting as a   mail delivery agent.B.1.2  rolling transaction logs forward and back   There is a need to be able to easily look back at previous states of   any database in order to repeat authorization checks at the time of a   transaction.  This is difficult to do with the RIPE database   implementation, which uses a sequentially written ASCII file and a   set of Berkeley DB maintained index files for traversal.  At the very   minimum, the way in which deletes or replacements are implemented   would need to be altered.   In order to easily support a view back at prior versions of objects,   the sequence number of the transaction at which each object was   entered would need to be kept with the object.  A pointer would be   needed back to the previous state of the object.  A deletion would   need to be implemented as a new object with a deleted attribute,   replacing the previous version of the object but retaining a pointer   back to it.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   A separate transaction log needs to be maintained.  Beyond some age,   the older versions of objects and the the older transaction log   entries can be removed although it is probably wise to archive them.B.1.3  committing or disposing of transactions   The ability to commit large transaction, or reject them as a whole   poses problems for simplistic database designs.  This form of commit   operation can be supported quite easily using memory mapped files.   The changes can be made in virtual memory only and then either   committed or disposed of.B.1.4  dealing with concurrency   Multiple connections may be active.  In addition, a single connection   may have multiple outstanding operations.  It makes sense to have a   single process or thread coordinate the responses for a given   connection and have multiple processes or threads each tending to a   single operation.  The operations may complete in random order.   Locking on reads is not essential.  Locking before write access is   essential.  The simplest approach to locking is to lock at the   database granularity or at the database and object type granularity.   Finer locking granularity can also be implemented.  Because there are   multiple databases, deadlock avoidance must be considered.  The usual   deadlock avoidance mechanism is to acquire all necessary locks in a   single operation or acquire locks in a prescribed order.B.2  Repository Mirroring for Redundancy   There are numerous reasons why the operator of a repository might   mirror their own repository.  Possibly the most obvious are   redundancy and the relative ease of disaster recovery.  Another   reason might be the widespread use of a small number of   implementations (but more than one) and the desire to insure that the   major repository software releases will accept a transaction before   fully committing to the transaction.   The operation of a repository mirror used for redundancy is quite   straightforward.  The transactions of the primary repository host can   be immediately fed to the redundant repository host.  For tighter   assurances that false positive confirmations will be sent, as a   matter of policy the primary repository host can require commit   confirmation before making a transaction sequence publicly available.   There are many ways in which the integrity of local data can be   assured regardless of a local crash in the midst of transaction disk   writes.  For example, transactions can be implemented as memoryVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   mapped file operations, with disk synchronization used as the local   commit mechanism, and disposal of memory copies of pages used to   handle commit failures.  The old pages can be written to a separate   file, the new pages written into the database.  The transaction can   be logged and old pages file can then be removed.  In the event of a   crash, the existence of a old pages file and the lack of a record of   the transaction completing would trigger a transaction roll back by   writing the old pages back to the database file.   The primary repository host can still sustain severe damage such as a   disk crash.  If the primary repository host becomes corrupted, the   use of a mirror repository host provides a backup and can provide a   rapid recovery from disaster by simply reversing roles.   If a mirror is set up using a different software implementation with   commit mirror confirmation required, any transaction which fails due   a software bug will be deferred indefinitely allowing other   transactions to proceed rather than halting the remote processing of   all transactions until the bug is fixed everywhere.B.3  Trust Relationships   If all repositories trust each other then there is never a need to   repeat authorization checks.  This enables a convenient interim step   for deployment prior to the completion of software supporting that   capability.  The opposite case is where no repository trusts any   other repository.  In this case, all repositories must roll forward   transactions gradually, checking the authorization of each remote   transaction.   It is likely that repositories will trust a subset of other   repositories.  This trust can reduce the amount of processing a   repository required to maintain mirror images of the full set of   data.  For example, a subset of repositories might be trustworthy in   that they take reasonable security measures, the organizations   themselves have the integrity not to alter data, and these   repositories trust only a limited set of similar repositories.  If   any one of these repositories receives a transaction sequence and   repeats the authorization checks, other major repositories which   trusts that repository need not repeat the checks.  In addition,   trust need not be mutual to reap some benefit in reduced processing.   As a transaction sequence is passed from repository to repository   each repository signs the transaction sequence before forwarding it.   If a receiving repository finds that any trusted repository has   signed the transaction sequence it can be considered authorized since   the trusted repository either trusted a preceding repository or   repeated the authorization checks.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000B.4  A Router as a Minimal Mirror   A router could serve as a minimal repository mirror.  The following   simplifications can be made.   1. No support for repeating authorization checks or transaction      authentication checks need be coded in the router.   2. The router must be adjacent only to trusted mirrors, generally      operated by the same organization.   3. The router would only check the authentication of the adjacent      repository mirrors.   4. No support for transaction submission or query need be coded in      the router.  No commit support is needed.   5. The router can dispose of any object types or attributes not      needed for configuration of route filters.   The need to update router configurations could be significantly   reduced if the router were capable of acting as a limited repository   mirror.   A significant amount of non-volatile storage would be needed.  There   are currently an estimated 100 transactions per day.  If storage were   flash memory with a limited number of writes, or if there were some   other reason to avoid writing to flash, the router could only update   the non-volatile copy every few days.  A transaction sequence request   can be made to get an update in the event of a crash, returning only   a few hundred updates after losing a few days of deferred writes.   The routers can still take a frequent or continuous feed of   transactions.   Alternately, router filters can be reconfigured periodically as they   are today.B.5  Dealing with Errors   If verification of an authorization check fails, the entire   transaction must be rejected and no further advancement of the   repository can occur until the originating repository corrects the   problem.  If the problem is due to a software bug, the offending   transaction can be removed manually once the problem is corrected.   If a software bug exists in the receiving software, then theVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   transaction sequence is stalled until the bug is corrected.  It is   better for software to error on the side of denying a transaction   than acceptance, since an error on the side of acceptance will   require later removal of the effects of the transaction.C  Deployment Considerations   This section described deployment considerations.  The intention is   to raise issues rather than to provide a deployment plan.   This document calls for a transaction exchange mechanism similar to   but not identical to the existing "near real time mirroring"   supported by the code base widely used by the routing registries.  As   an initial step, the transaction exchange can be implemented without   the commit protocol or the ability to recheck transaction   authorization.  This is a fairly minimal step from the existing   capabilities.   The transition can be staged as follows:   1. Modify the format of "near real time mirroring" transaction      exchange to conform to the specifications of this document.   2. Implement commit protocol and confirmation support.   3. Implement remote recheck of authorization.  Prior to this step all      repositories must be trusted.   4. Allow further decentralization of the repositories.D  Privacy of Contact Information   The routing registries have contained contact information.  The   redistribution of this contact information has been a delicate issue   and in some countries has legal implications.   The person and role objects contain contact information.  These   objects are referenced by NIC-handles.  There are some attributes   such as the "changed" and "notify" attributes that require an email   address.  All of the fields that currently require an email address   must also accept a NIC-handle.   The person and role objects should not be redistributed by default.   If a submission contains an email address in a field such as a   changed field rather than a NIC-handle the submitter should be aware   that they are allowing that email address to be redistributed andVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000   forfeiting any privacy.  Repositories which do not feel that prior   warnings of this forfeiture are sufficient legal protection should   reject the submission requesting that a NIC-handle be used.   Queries to role and person objects arriving at a mirror must be   referred to the authoritative repository where whatever   authentication, restrictions, or limitations deemed appropriate by   that repository can be enforced directly.   Software should make it possible to restrict the redistribution of   other entire object types as long as those object types are not   required for the authorization of additions of other object types.   It is not possible to redistribute objects with attributes removed or   altered since this would invalidate the submitter's signature and   make subsequent authentication checks impossible.  Repositories   should not redistribute a subset of the objects of a given type.   Software should also not let a transaction contain both   redistributable (e.g.  policy objects) and non-redustributable   objects (e.g.  person) since there is no way to verify the signature   of these transactions without the non-redustributable objects.   When redistributing legacy data, contact information in attributes   such as "changed" and "notify" should be stripped to maintain   privacy.  The "integrity" attribute on these objects should already   be set to "legacy" indicating that their origin is questionable, so   the issue of not being able to recheck signatures is not as   significant.References   [1]  Alaettinoglu, C., Villamizar, C., Gerich, E., Kessens, D.,        Meyer, D., Bates, T., Karrenberg, D. and M. Terpstra, "Routing        Policy Specification Language",RFC 2622, June 1999.   [2]  Bates, T., Gerich, E., Joncheray, L., Jouanigot, J-M.,        Karrenberg, D., Terpstra, M. and J. Yu, "Representation of IP        Routing Policies in a Routing Registry (ripe-81++)",RFC 1786,        March 1995.   [3]  Villamizar, C., Alaettinoglu, C., Meyer, D. and S. Murphy,        "Routing Policy System Security",RFC 2725, June 1999.   [4]  Zsako, J., "PGP Authentication for RIPE Database Updates",RFC2726, December 1999.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000Security Considerations   An authentication and authorization model for routing policy object   submission is provided by [3].  Cryptographic authentication is   addressed by [4].  This document provides a protocol for the exchange   of information among distributed routing registries such that the   authorization model provided by [3] can be adhered to by all   registries and any deviation (hopefully accidental) from those rules   on the part of a registry can be identified by other registries or   mirrors.Authors' Addresses   Curtis Villamizar   Avici Systems   EMail: curtis@avici.com   Cengiz Alaettinoglu   ISI   EMail: cengiz@ISI.EDU   Ramesh Govindan   ISI   EMail: govindan@ISI.EDU   David M. Meyer   Cisco   EMail: dmm@cisco.comVillamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 2769           Routing Policy System Replication       February 2000Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Villamizar, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 42]

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