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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                      B. HoeneisenRequest for Comments: 6117                                       Ucom.chObsoletes:3761                                             A. MayrhoferCategory: Standards Track                                        enum.atISSN: 2070-1721                                             J. Livingood                                                                 Comcast                                                              March 2011IANA Registration of Enumservices:Guide, Template, and IANA ConsiderationsAbstract   This document specifies a revision of the IANA Registration   Guidelines for Enumservices, describes corresponding registration   procedures, and provides a guideline for creating Enumservice   Specifications.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6117.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2011 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF   Contributions published or made publicly available before November   10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this   material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow   modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.   Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling   the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified   outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may   not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format   it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other   than English.Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.  Terminology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43.  Registration Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53.1.  Functionality Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53.2.  Naming Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53.3.  Security Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63.4.  Publication Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74.  Enumservice Creation Cookbook  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74.1.  General Enumservice Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . .74.2.  Classification, Type and Subtype . . . . . . . . . . . . .94.2.1.  General Type/Subtype Considerations  . . . . . . . . .94.2.2.  Protocol-Based Enumservices Class  . . . . . . . . . .104.2.3.  Application-Based Enumservice Classes  . . . . . . . .104.2.4.  Data Type-Based Enumservice Class  . . . . . . . . . .124.2.5.  Other Enumservice  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .135.  Required Sections and Information  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .135.1.  Introduction (REQUIRED)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .135.2.  IANA Registration (REQUIRED) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .135.2.1.  Enumservice Class (<class>)  . . . . . . . . . . . . .135.2.2.  Enumservice Type (<type>)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .145.2.3.  Enumservice Subtype (<subtype>)  . . . . . . . . . . .145.2.4.  URI Scheme(s) (<urischeme>)  . . . . . . . . . . . . .155.2.5.  Functional Specification (<functionalspec>)  . . . . .155.2.6.  Security Considerations (<security>) . . . . . . . . .155.2.7.  Intended Usage (<usage>) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .165.2.8.  Enumservice Specification (<registrationdocs>) . . . .165.2.9.  Requesters (<requesters>)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .175.2.10. Further Information (<additionalinfo>) . . . . . . . .175.3.  Examples (REQUIRED)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .185.4.  Implementation Recommendations / Notes (OPTIONAL)  . . . .185.5.  DNS Considerations (REQUIRED)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .185.6.  Security Considerations (REQUIRED) . . . . . . . . . . . .195.7.  IANA Considerations (REQUIRED) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .205.8.  Other Sections (OPTIONAL)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 20116.  The Process of Registering New Enumservices  . . . . . . . . .216.1.  Step 1: Read This Document in Detail . . . . . . . . . . .226.2.  Step 2: Write and Submit Registration Document . . . . . .226.3.  Step 3: Request Comments From the IETF Community . . . . .236.3.1.  Outcome 1: No Changes Needed . . . . . . . . . . . . .23       6.3.2.  Outcome 2: Changes, But No Further Comments               Requested  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .236.3.3.  Outcome 3: Changes and Further Comments Requested  . .236.4.  Step 4: Submit Registration Document to IANA . . . . . . .246.5.  Step 5: Expert Review  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24       6.5.1.  Outcome 1: Experts Approve the Registration               Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .256.5.2.  Outcome 2: Changes Required  . . . . . . . . . . . . .25       6.5.3.  Outcome 3: Experts Reject the Registration Document  . 256.6.  Step 6: Publication of the Registration Document . . . . .256.7.  Step 7: Adding Enumservice to the IANA Registry  . . . . .257.  Expert Review  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .267.1.  Expert Selection Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .267.2.  Review Guidelines  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .267.3.  Appeals  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .278.  Revision of Existing Enumservice Specifications  . . . . . . .279.  Extension of Existing Enumservice Specifications . . . . . . .2710. Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2810.1. Considerations Regarding This Document . . . . . . . . . .2810.2. Enumservice Security Considerations Guideline  . . . . . .2811. IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2811.1. Registry Update  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2811.2. Registration Template (XML chunk)  . . . . . . . . . . . .2811.3. Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2911.4. Structure  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3011.5. Expert Review Procedure  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3011.6. Registration Procedure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3011.6.1. Published as an RFC  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3111.6.2. Published as a Non-RFC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3111.7. Change Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3211.8. Restrictions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3212. Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3213. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3313.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3313.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34Appendix A.  IANA Registration Template Examples . . . . . . . . .36Appendix B.  Changes fromRFC 3761 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 20111.  Introduction   E.164 Number Mapping (ENUM) [RFC6116] provides an identifier mapping   mechanism to map E.164 numbers [ITU.E164.2005] to Uniform Resource   Identifiers (URIs) [RFC3986] using the Domain Name System (DNS)   [RFC1035].  One of the primary concepts of ENUM is the definition of   "Enumservices", which allows for providing different URIs for   different applications of said mapping mechanism.   This document specifies a revision of the IANA registry for   Enumservices, which was originally described in [RFC3761].  This   document obsoletesSection 3 of RFC 3761 whileRFC 6116 obsoletesRFC3761.   The new registration processes, which are detailed inSection 6, have   been specifically designed to be decoupled from the existence of the   ENUM working group.  Compared toRFC 3761, the main changes are as   follows:   o  For an Enumservice to be inserted to the IANA registry,      "Specification Required", which implies the use of a Designated      Expert, according to "Guidelines for Writing an IANA      Considerations Section in RFCs" [RFC5226], are now sufficient.   o  The IANA Registration Template has been supplemented with elements      for "Enumservice Class" and "Enumservice Specification".   The IETF's ENUM Working Group has encountered an unnecessary amount   of variation in the format of Enumservice Specifications.  The ENUM   Working Group's view of what particular information is required   and/or recommended has also evolved, and capturing these best current   practices is helpful in both the creation of new Enumservice   Specifications, as well as the revision or refinement of existing   Enumservice Specifications.2.  Terminology   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 in [RFC2119].   For the purpose of this document:   o  "Registration Document" refers to a draft specification that      defines an Enumservice and proposes its registration following the      procedures outlined herein.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   o  "Enumservice Specification" refers to a Registration Document that      has been approved by the experts and published according to      "Specification Required" as defined in [RFC5226].3.  Registration Requirements   As specified in the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF, [RFC5234])   found inSection 3.4.3 of [RFC6116], an Enumservice is made up of   Types and Subtypes.  For any given Type, the allowable Subtypes (if   any) must be defined in the Enumservice Specification.  There is   currently no concept of a registered Subtype outside the scope of a   given Type.   While the combination of each Type and all of its Subtypes   constitutes the allowed values for the "Enumservice" field, it is not   sufficient to just list their allowed values.  To allow for   interoperability, a complete Enumservice Specification MUST document   the semantics of the Type and Subtype values to be registered, and   MUST contain all sections listed inSection 5 of this document.   Furthermore, in order for an Enumservice to be registered, the entire   Registration Document requires approval by the experts according to   "Specification Required", which implies the use of a Designated   Expert, as set out in "Guidelines for Writing an IANA Considerations   Section in RFCs" [RFC5226] andSection 7.2 of this document.   All Enumservice Specifications are expected to conform also to   various requirements laid out in the following sections.3.1.  Functionality Requirements   A registered Enumservice must be able to function as a selection   mechanism for choosing one Naming Authority Pointer (NAPTR) [RFC3403]   DNS Resource Record (RR) from a set of such RRs.  That means the   Enumservice Specification MUST define how to use the NAPTR RR and the   URI(s) the NAPTR RR resolves to.   Specifically, a registered Enumservice MUST specify the URI Scheme(s)   that may be used for the Enumservice, and, when needed, other   information that will have to be transferred into the URI resolution   process itself.3.2.  Naming Requirements   The name of an Enumservice MUST be unique in order to be useful as a   selection criteria:   o  The Type MUST be unique.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   o  The Subtype (being dependent on the Type) MUST be unique within a      given Type.   Types and Subtypes MUST conform to the ABNF specified inSection3.4.3 of [RFC6116].   The ABNF specified inSection 3.4.3 of [RFC6116] allows the "-"   (dash) character for Types and Subtypes.  To avoid confusion with   possible future prefixes, a "-" MUST NOT be used as the first nor as   the second character of a Type nor a Subtype.  Furthermore, a "-"   MUST NOT be used as the last character of a Type nor a Subtype.  In   addition, Types and Subtypes are case insensitive and SHOULD be   specified in lowercase letters.   Note: The legacy IANA registry of Enumservices contains Type and   Subtype strings with uppercase letters.  Implementors could be   tempted to refuse handling uppercase Type or Subtype strings, which   could negatively affect interoperability.   To avoid confusion with Enumservice fields using a deprecated   (obsolete) syntax, Type and Subtype MUST NOT start with the string   "e2u".   The Subtype for one Type MAY have the same identifier as a Subtype   for another Type, but it is not sufficient to simply reference   another Type's Subtype.  The functionality of each Subtype MUST be   fully specified in the context of the Type being registered.Section 4 contains further naming requirements.3.3.  Security Requirements   An analysis of security issues is REQUIRED for all registered   Enumservices.  (This is in accordance with the basic requirements for   all IETF protocols.)   All descriptions of security issues MUST be as accurate and extensive   as feasible.  In particular, a statement that there are "no security   issues associated with this Enumservice" must not be confused with   "the security issues associated with this Enumservice have not been   assessed".   There is no requirement that an Enumservice must be completely free   of security risks.  Nevertheless, all known security risks MUST be   identified in an Enumservice Specification.   Some of the issues to be looked at in a security analysis of an   Enumservice are:Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   1.  Complex Enumservices may include provisions for directives that       institute actions on a user's resources.  In many cases provision       can be made to specify arbitrary actions in an unrestricted       fashion which may then have devastating results (especially if       there is a risk for a new ENUM look-up, and because of that an       infinite loop in the overall resolution process of the E.164       number).   2.  Complex Enumservices may include provisions for directives that       institute actions which, while not directly harmful, may result       in disclosure of information that either facilitates a subsequent       attack or else violates the users' privacy in some way.   3.  An Enumservice might be targeted for applications that require       some sort of security assurance but do not provide the necessary       security mechanisms themselves.  For example, an Enumservice       could be defined for storage of confidential security services       information such as alarm systems or message service passcodes,       which in turn require an external confidentiality service.3.4.  Publication Requirements   Enumservices Specifications MUST be published according to the   requirements for "Specification Required" set out in "Guidelines for   Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs" [RFC5226].  RFCs   fulfill these requirements.  Therefore, it is strongly RECOMMENDED to   publish Enumservice Specifications as RFCs.   In case the Enumservice Specification is not published as an RFC,   sufficient information that allows unique identification of the   Enumservice Specification MUST be provided.4.  Enumservice Creation Cookbook4.1.  General Enumservice Considerations   ENUM is an extremely flexible identifier mapping mechanism, using   E.164 (phone) numbers as input identifiers, and returning URIs as   output identifiers.  Because of this flexibility, almost every use   case for ENUM could be implemented in several ways.Section 2 of "Guidelines for Writing an IANA  Considerations Section   in RFCs" [RFC5226] provides motivation for why management of a   namespace might be necessary.  Even though the namespace for   Enumservices is rather large (up to 32 alphanumeric characters),   there are reasons to manage this in accordance withSection 2 of   [RFC5226].  The following is a list of motivations applying to   Enumservices:Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   o  Prevent hoarding or wasting of values: Enumservice Types are not      an opaque identifier to prevent collisions in the namespace, but      rather identify the use of a certain technology in the context of      ENUM.  Service Types might also be displayed to end users in      implementations, so meaningful Type strings having a clear      relation to the protocols and applications used are strongly      RECOMMENDED.  Therefore, preventing hoarding, wasting, or      "hijacking" of Enumservice Type strings is important.   o  Sanity check to ensure sensible or necessary requests: This      applies to Enumservices, since especially various Enumservices for      the same purpose would reduce the chance of successful      interoperability, and unnecessarily increase confusion among      implementers.   o  Delegation of namespace portions: Theoretically, the Type and/or      Subtype structure of Enumservices would allow for delegations of      Type values, and self-supporting management of Subtype values by a      delegate within the Type value.  Such delegates could, for      example, be other standardization bodies.  However, this would      require clear policies regarding publication and use of such      Subtypes.  Delegation of Enumservice namespace portions is      therefore currently not supported.   o  Interoperability: Since the benefit of an Enumservice rises with      the number of supporting clients, the registration and use of      several services for a similar or identical purpose clearly      reduces interoperability.  Operational circumstances suggest to      keep the space occupied by all services published in the NAPTR      RRSet at any owner in the e164.arpa domain bounded.  Registration      of nearly identical services and subsequent competing or parallel      use could easily increase the DNS operational complexity.   Generally, before commencing work on a new Enumservice registration,   the following should be considered:   o  Is there an existing Enumservice that could fulfill the desired      functionality without overloading it?  Check the IANA Enumservice      Registry at <http://www.iana.org/assignments/enum-services>.   o  Is there work in progress, or previous work, on a similar      Enumservice?  Check the <enum@ietf.org> mailing list archives at      <http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/enum/index.html>, and search      the Internet-Drafts Archive at <http://tools.ietf.org/>.  Some      Internet-Drafts may have expired and no longer be available in the      Internet-Drafts Archive, or some work on Enumservices may have      been considered outside the IETF; therefore, we also recommend a      web search.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   oSection 4.2 provides three general categories for Enumservice      classification.  In some cases, there might be several options for      designing an Enumservice.  For example, a mapping service using      HTTP could be considered a "protocol Type" Enumservice (using HTTP      as the protocol), while it could also be viewed as an "application      Type" Enumservice, with the application providing access to      mapping services.  In such a case where several options are      available, defining use cases before commencing work on the      Enumservice itself might be useful before making a decision on      which aspect of the Enumservice is more important.4.2.  Classification, Type and Subtype   Because of their flexibility, Enumservices can be and are used in a   lot of different ways.  This section contains a classification of   Enumservices, and provides guidance for choosing suitable Type and   Subtype strings for each individual Enumservice Class.   The Classification of each Enumservice MUST be listed in the   Registration Document (seeSection 5.2).  If the Enumservice cannot   be assigned to one of the classes outlined below, the Registration   Document MUST contain a section on the difficulties encountered while   trying to classify the service to help the experts in their decision.4.2.1.  General Type/Subtype Considerations   To avoid confusion, the name of a URI Scheme MUST NOT be used as a   Type string for an Enumservice that is not specifically about the   respective protocol or URI Scheme.  For example, the Type string   "imap" would be inadequate for use in an Enumservice about "Internet   mapping" services, because it corresponds to an existing URI Scheme /   protocol for something different.   If Subtypes are defined, the minimum number SHOULD be two (including   the empty Subtype, if defined).  The choice of just one possible   Subtype for a given Type does not add any information when selecting   an ENUM record, and hence can be left out completely.  However,   potential future expansion of a Type towards several Subtypes may   justify the use of Subtypes, even in the case that just one is   currently defined, as noted inSection 9.   It is perfectly legal under a certain Type to mix the Enumservice   without a Subtype (empty Subtype) with Enumservices containing a   Subtype.  In that case, however, the Enumservice with an empty   Subtype SHOULD be specified to reflect the base service, while the   other Enumservices SHOULD be specified to reflect variants.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 20114.2.2.  Protocol-Based Enumservices Class   Such an Enumservice indicates that an interaction using the named   protocol will result for use of this NAPTR.  The expected behavior of   a system using this Enumservice MUST be clear from the protocol.   A good indication that an Enumservice belongs to this Class is the   fact that a client does not need to understand the actual application   to make use of an instance of this Enumservice.   Examples of such Enumservices include "xmpp" [RFC4979] and "sip"   [RFC3764].4.2.2.1.  Protocol-Based Enumservice "Type" Strings   A protocol-based Enumservice SHOULD use the lowercase name of the   protocol as its Type string.  Names as registered in the IANA Port   Number Registry (<http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-numbers>,   defined inSection 8 and 9 of [RFC2780]) are preferred.4.2.2.2.  Protocol-Based Enumservice "Subtype" Strings   Where there is a single URI Scheme associated with this protocol, a   Subtype SHOULD NOT be specified for the Enumservice.   Where there are a number of different URI Schemes associated with   this protocol, the Enumservice Specification MAY use the empty   Subtype for all URI Schemes that it specifies as mandatory to   implement.  For each URI Scheme that is not mandatory to implement, a   distinct Subtype string MUST be used.   If Subtypes are defined, it is RECOMMENDED to use the URI Scheme name   as the Subtype string.4.2.3.  Application-Based Enumservice Classes   Application-based Enumservices are used when the kind of service   intended is not fully defined by a protocol specification.  There are   three cases here:   o  Common Application Enumservice:      The application reflects a kind of interaction that can be      realized by different protocols, but where the intent of the      publisher is the same.  From a user's perspective, there is a      common kind of interaction -- how that interaction is implemented      is not important.  The Enumservice Specification MUST describe the      interaction and expected behavior in enough detail that anHoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011      implementation can decide if this activity is one in which it can      engage.  However, it is RECOMMENDED that the Enumservice be      defined in a way that will allow others to use it at a later date.      An Enumservice that defines a generalized application is preferred      to one that has narrow use.      An example of this flavor of Enumservice is email.  Whilst this      might appear to be a "pure" protocol scheme, it is not.  The URI      Scheme is 'mailto', and it does not identify the protocol used to      offer or retrieve emails by the sender or the recipient.      Another example is the Short Messaging Service (SMS), where the      existence of such an Enumservice indicates that the publishing      entity is capable of engaging in sending or receiving a message      according to the SMS specifications.  The underlying protocol used      and the URI Scheme for the addressable end point can differ, but      the "user visible" interaction of sending and receiving an SMS is      similar.   o  Subset Enumservice:      The application interaction reflects a subset of the interactions      possible by use of a protocol.  Use of this Enumservice indicates      that some options available by use of the protocol will not be      accepted or are not possible in this case.  Any such Enumservice      Specification MUST define the options available by use of this      NAPTR in enough detail that an implementation can decide whether      or not it can use this Enumservice.  Examples of this kind of      Enumservice are "voice:tel" and "fax:tel".  In both cases, the URI      holds a telephone number.  However, the essential feature of these      Enumservices is that the telephone number is capable of receiving      a voice call or of receiving a Facsimile transmission,      respectively.  These form subsets of the interactions capable of      using the telephone number, and so have their own Enumservices.      These allow an end point to decide if it has the appropriate      capability to engage in the advertised user service (a voice call      or sending a fax) rather than just being capable of making a      connection to such a destination address.  This is especially      important where there is no underlying mechanism within the      protocol to negotiate a different kind of user interaction.   o  Ancillary Application Enumservice      Another variant on this is the Ancillary Application.  This is one      in which further processing (potentially using a number of      different protocols or methods) is the intended result of using      this Enumservice.  An example of this kind of application is the      "pstn:tel" Enumservice.  This indicates that the NAPTR holdsHoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011      number portability data.  It implies that the client should engage      in number portability processing using the associated URI.  Note      that this Enumservice usually does not itself define the kind of      interaction available using the associated URI.  That application      is negotiated with some other "out of band" means (either through      prior negotiation, or explicitly through the number portability      process, or through negotiation following the selection of the      final destination address).4.2.3.1.  Application-Based Enumservice "Type" Strings   It is recommended that Application-class Enumservices use the   lowercase well-known name of the abstract application as the Type   string.4.2.3.2.  Application-Based Enumservice "Subtype" Strings   It is RECOMMENDED that the URI Scheme(s) used by the application be   used as the Subtype string(s).  Subtype strings MAY be shared between   URI Schemes, if all the URI Schemes within the same Subtype are   mandatory to implement.   If it is foreseen that there is only one URI Scheme ever to be used   with the application, the empty Subtype string MAY be used.4.2.4.  Data Type-Based Enumservice Class   "Data Type" Enumservices typically refer to a specific data type or   format, which may be addressed using one or more URI Schemes and   protocols.  Examples of such Enumservices include "vpim" [RFC4238]   and "vcard" [RFC4969].4.2.4.1.  Data Type-Based Enumservice "Type" Strings   It is recommended to use the lowercase well known name of the data   type or format name as the Type string.4.2.4.2.  Data Type-Based Enumservice "Subtype" Strings   It is RECOMMENDED to use the URI Schemes used to access the service   as Subtype strings.  Subtype strings MAY be shared between URI   Schemes, if all the URI Schemes within the same Subtype are mandatory   to implement.   If there is only one URI Scheme foreseen to access the data type or   format, the empty Subtype string MAY be used.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 20114.2.5.  Other Enumservice   In case an Enumservice proposal cannot be assigned to any of the   classes mentioned above, the <class> element (Enumservice Class) in   the IANA Registration Template (seeSection 5.2) MUST be populated   with "Other".  In that case, the Enumservice Specification MUST   contain a section elaborating on why the Enumservice does not fit   into the classification structure.5.  Required Sections and Information   There are several sections that MUST appear in an Enumservice   Specification.  These sections are as follows, and they SHOULD be in   the given order.   The following terms SHOULD begin with a capital letter, whenever they   refer to the IANA Registration:   o  Class   o  Type   o  Subtype   o  URI Scheme5.1.  Introduction (REQUIRED)   An introductory section MUST be included.  This section will explain,   in plain English, the purpose and intended use of the proposed   Enumservice registration.   The Introduction SHOULD start with a short sentence about ENUM,   introduce the protocol used in the Enumservice, and discuss the   Enumservice as it refers from the E.164 number to the protocol or   service.5.2.  IANA Registration (REQUIRED)   This section MUST be included in an Enumservice Specification.  Where   a given Enumservice Type has multiple Subtypes, there MUST be a   separate "IANA Registration" section for each Subtype.  The following   sections list the elements that are to be used in the XML-chunk-based   Registration Template of an "IANA Registration" section.5.2.1.  Enumservice Class (<class>)   This element contains the Class of the Enumservice as defined inSection 4.2.  Its value MUST be one of (without quotes):   o  "Protocol-Based": The Enumservice belongs to the Protocol-based      class as described inSection 4.2.2.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   o  "Application-Based, Common": The Enumservice is a "common" case of      the Application-based class as described inSection 4.2.3.   o  "Application-Based, Subset": The Enumservice belongs to the      "subset" case of the Application-based class as described inSection 4.2.3.   o  "Application-Based, Ancillary": The Enumservice is an "ancillary"      case of the Application-based class, as described inSection 4.2.3.   o  "Data Type-Based": The Enumservice belongs to the Data Type-Based      class as described inSection 4.2.4.   o  "Other": The majority of the functionality of the Enumservice does      not fall into one of the classes defined.   Class Example      <class>Protocol-Based</class>5.2.2.  Enumservice Type (<type>)   The Type of the Enumservice.  All Types SHOULD be listed in lower-   case.  The choice of Type depends on the Enumservice Class.  Please   find further instructions inSection 4.   Type Example      <type>foo</type>5.2.3.  Enumservice Subtype (<subtype>)   The Subtype of the Enumservice.  All Subtypes SHOULD be listed in   lower-case.  The choice of Subtype depends on the Enumservice Class.   Should the Enumservice not utilize a Subtype, then the <subtype>   element MUST be omitted in the IANA Registration Template.  If a   given Enumservice Type has multiple Subtypes, then there MUST be a   separate IANA Registration Template for each Subtype.  Please find   further instructions inSection 4.   Subtype Example      <subtype>bar</subtype>Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 20115.2.4.  URI Scheme(s) (<urischeme>)   The URI Schemes [RFC3986] that are used with the Enumservice.  The   selection of URI Schemes often depends on the Enumservice Class,   Type, and/or Subtype.  A colon MUST NOT be placed after the URI   Scheme name.  If there is more than one URI Scheme, then one   <urischeme> element per URI scheme MUST be used in the IANA   Registration Template.  Please find further instructions inSection 4.   URI Scheme Example      <urischeme>bar</urischeme>      <urischeme>sbar</urischeme>   Note: A client cannot choose a specific ENUM record in a record set   based on the URI Scheme - the selection is only based on Type and   Subtype, in accordance with [RFC3402].5.2.5.  Functional Specification (<functionalspec>)   The Functional Specification describes how the Enumservice is used in   connection with the URI to which it resolves.   Functional Specification Example          <functionalspec>            <paragraph>              This Enumservice indicates that the resource              identified can be addressed by the associated              URI in order to foo the bar.            </paragraph>            <paragraph>              [...]            </paragraph>          </functionalspec>   Where the terms used are non-obvious, they should be defined in the   Enumservice Specification, or a reference to an external document   containing their definition should be provided.5.2.6.  Security Considerations (<security>)   A reference to the "Security Considerations" section of a given   Enumservice Specification.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   Security Considerations Example          <security>            See <xref type="rfc" data="rfc4979"/>,Section 6.          </security>5.2.7.  Intended Usage (<usage>)   One of the following values (without quotes):   o  "COMMON": Indicates that the Enumservice is intended for      widespread use on the public Internet, and that its scope is not      limited to a certain environment.   o  "LIMITED USE": Indicates that the Enumservice is intended for use      on a limited scope, for example in private ENUM-like application      scenarios.  The use case provided in the Enumservice Specification      should describe such a scenario.   o  "DEPRECATED": Indicates that the Enumservice has been declared      deprecated (Section 11.7) and is not to be used in new      deployments.  Applications SHOULD however expect to encounter      legacy instances of this Enumservice.   Intended Usage Example      <usage>COMMON</usage>5.2.8.  Enumservice Specification (<registrationdocs>)   Reference(s) to the Document(s) containing the Enumservice   Specification.   Enumservice Specification Examples      <registrationdocs>        <xref type="rfc" data="rfc4979"/>      </registrationdocs>   or      <registrationdocs>        <xref type="rfc" data="rfc2026"/> (obsoleted byRFC 2551)        <xref type="rfc" data="rfc2551"/>      </registrationdocs>   orHoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011      <registrationdocs>        [International Telecommunications Union,        "Enumservice Specification for Foobar",        ITU-F Recommendation B.193, Release 73, Mar 2009.]      </registrationdocs>5.2.9.  Requesters (<requesters>)   The persons requesting the registration of the Enumservice.  Usually   these are the authors of the Enumservice Specification.   Requesters Example      <requesters>        <xref type="person" data="John_Doe"/>      </requesters>      [...]      <people>        <person>          <name>John Doe</name>          <org>ACME Research and Development Inc.</org>          <uri>mailto:jd@acme.example.com</uri>          <updated>2008-11-20</updated>        </person>      </people>   If there is more than one requester, there MUST be one <xref> element   per requester in the <requesters> element, and one <person> chunk per   requester in the <people> element.5.2.10.  Further Information (<additionalinfo>)   Any other information the authors deem interesting, including   artwork.   Further Information Example      <additionalinfo>        <paragraph>more info goes here</paragraph>      </additionalinfo>   Note: If there is no such additional information, then the   <additionalinfo> element is omitted.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 20115.3.  Examples (REQUIRED)   This section MUST show at least one example of the Enumservice being   registered, for illustrative purposes.  The example(s) shall in no   way limit the various forms that a given Enumservice may take, and   this should be noted at the beginning of this section of the   document.  The example(s) MUST show the specific formatting of the   intended NAPTRs (according to [RFC3403] and [RFC6116]), including one   or more NAPTR example(s), AND a brief textual description, consisting   of one or more sentences written in plain English, explaining the   various parts or attributes of the record(s).   The example(s) SHOULD contain a brief description how a client   supporting this Enumservice could behave, if that description was not   already given in, e.g., the Introduction or the Functional   Specification.   The example(s) SHOULD follow any relevant IETF guidelines on the use   of domain names, phone numbers, and other resource identifier   examples, such as [RFC2606].   For example:   $ORIGIN 9.7.8.0.6.9.2.3.6.1.4.4.e164.arpa.   @ IN NAPTR 100 10 "u" "E2U+foo:bar" "!^.*$!bar://example.com/!" .5.4.  Implementation Recommendations / Notes (OPTIONAL)   Recommendations that pertain to implementation and/or operations   SHOULD be included.  Such a section is helpful to someone reading an   Enumservice Specification and trying to understand how best to use it   to support their network or service.5.5.  DNS Considerations (REQUIRED)   In case the inclusion of protocols and URI Schemes into ENUM   specifically introduces new DNS issues, those MUST be described   within this section.   Such DNS issues include, but are not limited to:   o  Assumptions about ownership or administrative control of the      namespace.   o  Requirement or need to use DNS wildcards.   o  Incompatibility with DNS wildcards.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   o  Presence or absence of respective NAPTR Resource Records at      particular levels in the DNS hierarchy (e.g., only for "full"      E.164 numbers or wildcards only).   o  Use of any Resource Records (especially non-NAPTR) within or      beyond the e164.arpa namespace other than those needed to resolve      the domain names that appear in the "replacement" URI.   o  Potential for significant additional load on the nameserver chain      due to use of the service, and the mitigation of such additional      load.   o  Mitigation of potential for DNS loops, specifically in cases where      the result URI of an Enumservice might be used to trigger      additional (subsequent) ENUM queries.  This applies in particular      to Enumservices using the 'tel' URI Scheme [RFC3966] or any other      (future) URI Scheme using (E.164) numbers.  "The ENUM Dip      Indicator Parameter for the tel URI" [RFC4759] provides an example      of a loop mitigation mechanism.   Rationale: some Enumservices try to exploit side effects of the DNS   that need to be explicitly discussed.5.6.  Security Considerations (REQUIRED)   A section explaining any potential security threats that are   especially applicable to the given registration MUST be included.   This MUST also include any information about access to Personally   Identifiable Information (PII).   An Enumservice Specification SHOULD NOT include general and obvious   security recommendations, such as securing servers with strong   password authentication.   For additional background, please note that [RFC3552] provides   guidance to write a good Security Considerations section.  In   addition, [RFC6116] already outlines security considerations   affecting ENUM as a whole.  Enumservice Specifications do not need to   and SHOULD NOT repeat considerations already listed in that document.   However, Enumservice Specifications SHOULD include a reference to   that section.   Also, ENUM refers to resources using existing URI Schemes and   protocols.  Enumservice Specifications do not need to and SHOULD NOT   repeat security considerations affecting those protocols and URI   Schemes themselves.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   However, in some cases, the inclusion of those protocols and URI   Schemes into ENUM specifically could introduce new security issues.   In these cases, those issues or risks MUST be covered in the   "Security Considerations" section of the Enumservice Specification.   Authors should pay particular attention to any indirect risks that   are associated with a proposed Enumservice, including cases where the   proposed Enumservice could lead to the discovery or disclosure of   Personally Identifiable Information (PII).5.7.  IANA Considerations (REQUIRED)   Describe the task IANA needs to fulfill to process the Enumservice   Registration Document.   For example:   This document requests the IANA registration of the Enumservice with   Type "foo" and Subtype "bar" according to the definitions in this   document, [RFC6117], and [RFC6116].   For example:   This document requests an update of the IANA registration of the   Enumservice Type "foo" with Subtype "bar", according to the   definitions in this document, [RFC6117], and [RFC6116].  Therefore,   in the existing IANA registration for this Enumservice, the   <registrationdocs> element (Enumservice Specification) is enhanced by   adding a supplementary reference that points to this document.   For example:   This document requests an update of the IANA registration of the   Enumservice Type "foo" with all its Subtypes, in order to declare it   deprecated.  Therefore, in the existing IANA registration for this   Enumservice, the <usage> element (Intended Usage) is changed to   "DEPRECATED", and the <registrationdocs> element (Enumservice   Specification) is enhanced by adding a supplementary reference that   points to this document.5.8.  Other Sections (OPTIONAL)   Other sections beyond those required above MAY be included in an   Enumservice Specification.  These sections may relate to the   specifics of the intended use of the Enumservice registration, as   well as to any associated technical, operational, administrative, or   other concerns.   A use case SHOULD be included by the authors of the proposal, so that   experts can better understand the problem the proposal seeks to solve   (intended use of the Enumservice).  The inclusion of such a use caseHoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   will both accelerate the Expert Review process, as well as make any   eventual registration easier to understand and implement by other   parties.6.  The Process of Registering New Enumservices   This section is an illustration of the process by which a new   Enumservice Registration Document is submitted for review and   comment, how such proposed Enumservices are reviewed, and how they   are published.  This section is a non-normative description of the   process.  The normative process is described in [RFC5226].   Figure 1 shows what authors of a Registration Document describing an   Enumservice must carry out before said Registration Document can be   formally submitted to IANA for Expert Review.  Figure 2 shows the   process from Expert Review onwards.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011                     +----------------------------+                     | Step 1: Read this document |                     +----------------------------+                                  |                                  V                   +-------------------------------+                   | Step 2:  Write R-D and submit |                   +-------------------------------+                                  |                                  V             +--------------------------------------------+             | Step 3:  Announce R-D and solicit feedback |<--+             +--------------------------------------------+   |                                  |                           |                                  V                           |                                 .^.                          |                               .     .                        |   +------------+            .  Feed-  .               +------------+   | Update R-D |<---------<    back     >------------>| Update R-D |   | and submit |  non-sub-  . results .   substantial | and submit |   +------------+  stantial    . in: .     changes     +------------+         |         changes       . .       needed         |         needed         Y         |                        | no changes needed         |                        V         |         +-----------------------------+         +-------->| Step 4:  Submit R-D to IANA |                   +-----------------------------+                                  :                                  :                                  V   R-D: Registration Document                                 Figure 16.1.  Step 1: Read This Document in Detail   This document, particularly in Sections3,4, and5, describes all of   the recommended and required sections, as well as requirements and   suggestions for content of an Enumservice Specification.6.2.  Step 2: Write and Submit Registration Document   An Internet-Draft (or another specification as appropriate) must be   written and made publicly available (submitted).  The Registration   Document shall follow the guidelines according to Sections4 and5 ofHoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   this document.  The Review Guidelines for experts are defined inSection 7.2.6.3.  Step 3: Request Comments From the IETF Community   The authors shall send an email to <enum@ietf.org>, in which comments   on the Registration Document are requested.  A proper public   reference (a URL is recommended) to the Registration Document must be   included in this email.   Note: The ENUM WG mailing list <enum@ietf.org> will be kept open   after conclusion of the ENUM WG.   The authors should allow a reasonable period of time to elapse, such   as two to four weeks, in order to collect any feedback.  The authors   then consider whether or not to take any of those comments into   account, by making changes to the Registration Document and   submitting a revision, or otherwise proceeding.  The following   outcomes are open to the authors.  The choice of path is left to the   authors' judgement.   Note: Whatever the outcome is, the experts performing the Expert   Review later in the process are not bound to any decision during this   phase.6.3.1.  Outcome 1: No Changes Needed   No changes to the Registration Document are made, and the authors   proceed to Step 4 below.   This outcome is recommended when the feedback received does not lead   to a new revision of the Registration Document.6.3.2.  Outcome 2: Changes, But No Further Comments Requested   The authors update the Registration Document and is/are confident   that all issues are resolved and do not require further discussion.   The authors proceed to Step 4 below.   This outcome is recommended when minor objections have been raised,   or minor changes have been suggested.6.3.3.  Outcome 3: Changes and Further Comments Requested   The authors update and submit the Registration Document, and proceed   to Step 3 above, which involves sending another email to   <enum@ietf.org> to request additional comments for the updated   version.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   This outcome is recommended when substantial objections have been   raised, or substantial changes have been suggested.6.4.  Step 4: Submit Registration Document to IANA   The authors submit the Registration Document to IANA (using the   <http://www.iana.org/> website) for Expert Review.                                  :                                  :                                  V                       +-----------------------+                       | Step 5: Expert Review |<-------------+                       +-----------------------+              |                                  |                           |                                  V                           |                                 .^.                          |                               .     .                        |     .---------.             .  Expert .               +------------+    ( Bad luck! )<-------- <    Review   >------------>| Update R-D |     `---------'   experts   . results .   changes     | and submit |                   reject      . in: .     required    +------------+                                 . .                                  Y                                  | experts approve                                  V                +-----------------------------------+                | Step 6: Publication of R-D        |                +-----------------------------------+                                  |                                  V           +---------------------------------------------+           | Step 7: Adding Enumservice to IANA Registry |           +---------------------------------------------+   R-D: Registration Document                                 Figure 26.5.  Step 5: Expert Review   IANA will take care of the "Expert Review" according to [RFC5226].   The Expert Review guidelines are outlined inSection 7.2 of this   document.  The authors must be prepared for further interaction with   IANA and the experts.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 20116.5.1.  Outcome 1: Experts Approve the Registration Document   No (more) changes to the Registration Document are made.  IANA will   inform the authors, who then will proceed to Step 6 below.6.5.2.  Outcome 2: Changes Required   The experts might require changes before they can approve the   Registration Document.  The authors update and submit the   Registration Document.  The authors inform the experts about the   available update, who then continue the Expert Review Process.6.5.3.  Outcome 3: Experts Reject the Registration Document   The expert might reject the Registration, which means the Expert   Review process is discontinued.6.6.  Step 6: Publication of the Registration Document   The authors are responsible for ensuring that the Registration   Document is published according to "Specification Required" as   defined in [RFC5226].   As set out inSection 3.4 it is strongly RECOMMENDED that Enumservice   Specifications be published RFCs.  As to every RFC, the normal IETF   publication process applies (see [Instructions2authors]); i.e., the   Registration Document is submitted in the form of an Internet Draft   (e.g. via an IETF Working Group or a sponsoring Area Director).   [Instructions2authors] also contains an option to publish an RFC as   'Independent Submission', which is further described in "Independent   Submissions to the RFC Editor" [RFC4846].6.7.  Step 7: Adding Enumservice to the IANA Registry   In cases where the Registration Document is to be published as an   RFC, the RFC publication process ensures that IANA will add the   Enumservice to the registry.   In cases where the Registration Document is to be published in a   specification other than RFC, the authors must inform IANA, as soon   as the Enumservice Specification has been published according to   "Specification Required" as defined in [RFC5226].  The   <registrationdocs> element in the IANA Registration Template must   contain an unambiguous reference to the Enumservice Specification   (see alsoSection 5.2).  In addition, the authors must provide IANA   with a stable URL to the Enumservice Specification, in order that   IANA may obtain the information included in the Enumservice   Specification.  IANA will then add the Enumservice to the registry.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 20117.  Expert Review7.1.  Expert Selection Process   According toSection 3.2 of [RFC5226], experts are appointed by the   IESG.  The IESG is responsible for ensuring that there is always a   sufficient pool of experts available.7.2.  Review Guidelines   Generally, the "Expert Review" process of an Enumservice follows the   guidelines documented inSection 3.3 of "Guidelines for Writing an   IANA Considerations Section in RFCs" [RFC5226].  Note thatRFC 5226   says 'The review may be wide or narrow, depending on the situation   and the judgment of the designated expert'.  Therefore, the following   list should be considered a guideline, rather than a binding list.   In case of conflicts between [RFC5226] and the guidelines in this   section, [RFC5226] remains authoritative.   The expert evaluates the criteria as set out in [RFC5226], and should   additionally consider the following:   o  Verify conformance with the ENUM specification [RFC6116].   o  Verify that the requirements set out in this document (Sections3      and 5) are met.  This includes checking for completeness and      whether all the aspects described in Sections3 and5 are      sufficiently addressed.   o  If a use case is provided, the experts should verify whether the      proposed Enumservice does actually match the use case.  The      experts should also determine whether the use case could be      covered by an existing Enumservice.   o  Verify that the Enumservice proposed cannot be confused with      identical (or similar) other Enumservices already registered.   o  If the Enumservice is classified according toSection 4.2, the      experts must verify that the principles of the Class in question      are followed.   o  In case the Enumservice is not classified, the experts must verify      whether a convincing reason for the deviation is provided in the      Registration Document.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   o  Investigate whether the proposed Enumservice has any negative side      effects on existing clients and infrastructure, particularly the      DNS.   o  If the output of processing an Enumservice might be used for input      to more ENUM processing (especially services returning 'tel'      URIs), the experts should verify that the authors have adequately      addressed the issue of potential query loops.7.3.  Appeals   Appeals of Expert Review decisions follow the process described inSection 7 of [RFC5226] andSection 6.5 of [RFC2026].8.  Revision of Existing Enumservice Specifications   Many Enumservice registrations, published via IETF RFCs, already   exist at the time of the development of this document.  These   existing Enumservice Specifications MAY be revised to comply with the   specifications contained herein.  All revisions of Enumservice   Specifications MUST be compliant with the specifications contained   herein.   Note: Enumservice Specifications updated only by [RFC6118] are not   compliant with the specifications contained herein!9.  Extension of Existing Enumservice Specifications   There are cases where it is more sensible to extend an existing   Enumservice registration rather than propose a new one.  Such cases   include adding a new Subtype to an existing Type.  Depending on the   nature of the extension, the original Enumservice Specification needs   to be extended (Updates) or replaced (Obsoletes) [RFC2223].   Specifically, an update is appropriate when a new Subtype is being   added without changes to the existing repertoire.  A replacement is   needed if there is a change to the default, or changes to the   assumptions of URI support in clients.   Any Enumservice Specifications for existing Enumservices that are   extended MUST comply with the specifications contained herein.  As a   consequence, revisions of existing Enumservice Specifications may be   required according toSection 8.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 201110.  Security Considerations10.1.  Considerations Regarding This Document   Since this document does not introduce any new technology, protocol,   or Enumservice Specification, there are no specific security issues   to be considered for this document.  However, as this is a guide to   authors of new Enumservice Specifications, the next section should be   considered closely by authors and experts.10.2.  Enumservice Security Considerations Guideline   Guidelines concerning the Security Considerations section of an   Enumservice Specification can be found inSection 5.6.11.  IANA Considerations11.1.  Registry Update   IANA updated the registry "Enumservice Registrations" as defined in   (this)Section 11, which replaces the old mechanism as defined in   [RFC3761].   It is noted that the process described herein applies only to   ordinary Enumservice registrations (i.e., the registration process of   "X-" Enumservices is beyond the scope of this document, and as per   [RFC6116] "P-" Enumservices will not be registered at all).11.2.  Registration Template (XML chunk)           <record>             <class> <!-- Enumservice Class --> </class>             <type> <!-- Type --> </type>             <subtype> <!-- Subtype --> </subtype>             <urischeme> <!-- URI Schema Name --> </urischeme>             <urischeme> <!-- another URI Schema Name --> </urischeme>             <functionalspec>               <paragraph>                 <!-- Text that explains the functionality of                      the Enumservice to be registered -->               </paragraph>             </functionalspec>             <security>                 <!-- Security Considerations of the                      Enumservice to be registered -->             </security>             <usage> <!-- COMMON, LIMITED USE, or OBSOLETE --> </usage>             <registrationdocs>Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011               <!-- Change accordingly -->               <xref type="rfc" data="rfc2551"/>             </registrationdocs>             <requesters>               <!-- Change accordingly -->               <xref type="person" data="John_Doe"/>               <xref type="person" data="Jane_Dale"/>             </requesters>             <additionalinfo>               <paragraph>                 <!-- Text with additional information about                      the Enumservice to be registered -->               </paragraph>               <artwork>                 <!-- There can be artwork sections, too -->                 :-)               </artwork>             </additionalinfo>           </record>          <people>            <person>              <name> <!-- Firstname Lastname --> </name>              <org> <!-- Organisation Name --> </org>              <uri> <!-- mailto: or http: URI --> </uri>              <updated> <!-- date format YYYY-MM-DD --> </updated>            </person>            <!-- repeat person section for each person -->          </people>   Authors of an Enumservice Specification are encouraged to use these   XML chunks as a template to create the IANA Registration Template.   Examples for the use of this template are contained inAppendix A.11.3.  Location   Approved Enumservice registrations are published in the IANA registry   named "Enumservice Registrations", which is available at the   following URI:   <http://www.iana.org/assignments/enum-services>.   This registry publishes representations derived from the IANA   Registration Template as described inSection 11.2 and specified inSection 5.2.   Where the Enumservice Specification is not an RFC, IANA must hold an   escrow copy of that Enumservice Specification.  Said escrow copy will   act as the master reference for that Enumservice registration.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 201111.4.  Structure   IANA maintains the Enumservice Registry sorted in alphabetical order.   The first sort field is Type, the second is Subtype.   [RFC6118] updates the existing Enumservices by transforming them into   the new XML-chunk-based IANA Registration Template (see alsoSection 8).11.5.  Expert Review Procedure   Whenever a Registration Document is submitted via the IANA website,   IANA will take care of the "Expert Review" process according to   "Guidelines for Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs"   [RFC5226].   To prevent clashes, IANA will check whether a request with identical   "type:subtype" (or "type" without Subtype) was submitted for Expert   Review earlier and will inform the experts accordingly.  The experts   are authorized to resolve clashes as they see fit.  The requesters   may need to update their registration request before getting expert   approval.   Once the experts have conditionally approved the Enumservice, IANA   will inform the authors.  This information should also include a   reminder that (i) the authors are now responsible for publication of   the Registration Document (see alsoSection 6.6) and (ii) the   Enumservice will be added to the IANA registry only after its   Enumservice Specification is published according to the   "Specification Required" policy as defined in [RFC5226] (see alsoSection 6.7).   Note: After sending the approval note to the authors, IANA has no   further responsibilities besides keeping internal records of approved   Registration Documents.  IANA will be involved again at registration   of the Enumservice (seeSection 11.6).11.6.  Registration Procedure   There is a slight difference in process depending on whether or not   the Enumservice Specification will be published as an RFC.  The   reason for this difference lies in the current RFC publication   process that includes IANA interaction shortly before publication of   an RFC.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 201111.6.1.  Published as an RFC   As per the RFC publication process, IANA will receive the Enumservice   Specification to carry out IANA actions shortly before publication of   the RFC.  The IANA action will be to register the Enumservice, i.e.,   add the Enumservice to the IANA "Enumservice Registrations" registry   (see alsoSection 11.3).   IANA must only add Enumservices to the Registry, if the experts have   (conditionally) approved the corresponding Enumservice Specification.   IANA should attempt to resolve possible conflicts arising from this   together with the experts.  In case there are substantial changes   between the (conditionally) approved and the to be published version,   IANA may reject the request after consulting the experts.   IANA must ensure that any further substantial changes the Enumservice   Specification might undergo before final RFC publication are approved   by the experts.   Note: Clearly editorial changes (such as typos) or minor changes in   purely editorial sections (such as Authors' Addresses,   Acknowledgments, References, and alike) are not considered   substantial.11.6.2.  Published as a Non-RFC   Once the authors have informed IANA about the publication, IANA must   ensure that the requirements for "Specification Required" as defined   in [RFC5226] are met, the reference to the specification is   unambiguous, and the content of the Enumservice Specification is   identical to the Registration Document as approved by the experts.   IANA will then register the Enumservice, i.e., add the Enumservice to   the IANA "Enumservice Registrations" registry, and make an escrow   copy (see alsoSection 11.3).   IANA must only add Enumservices to the Registry, if the experts have   approved the corresponding Enumservice Specification.  IANA should   attempt to resolve possible conflicts arising from this together with   the experts.  In case there are substantial changes between the   approved and the published version, IANA may reject the request after   consulting the experts.   Note: Clearly editorial changes (such as typos) or minor changes in   purely editorial sections (such as Authors' Addresses,   Acknowledgments, References, and alike) are not considered   substantial.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 201111.7.  Change Control   Change control of any Enumservice registrations is done by   "Specification Required", which implies the use of a Designated   Expert, according to [RFC5226].  Updates of Enumservice   Specifications MUST comply with the requirements described in this   document.  Updates are handled the same way as initial Enumservice   registrations.   Authorized Change Controllers are the experts and the IESG.   Enumservice registrations must not be deleted.  An Enumservice that   is believed to be no longer appropriate for use can be declared   deprecated by publication of a new Enumservice Specification,   changing the Enumservice <usage> element (Intended Usage) to   "DEPRECATED"; such Enumservices will be clearly marked in the lists   published by IANA.  As obsoletions are updates, they are also handled   the same way as initial Enumservice registrations.  Alternatively,   Enumservices may be declared deprecated by an IESG action.11.8.  Restrictions   As stated inSection 3.2, a "-" (dash) MUST NOT be used as the first   nor as the second nor as the last character of a Type or a Subtype.   Furthermore, Type or Subtype of any Enumservice MUST NOT be set to,   nor start with, "E2U".  Any Enumservice registration requests not   following these restrictions must be rejected by IANA, and the Expert   Review process should not be initiated.Section 5.2 contains examples for Enumservice registrations.   Therefore, IANA must not register an Enumservice with Type or Subtype   set to "foo", "bar", or "sbar", unless the experts explicitly confirm   an exception.12.  Acknowledgments   The authors would like to thank the following people who have   provided feedback or significant contributions to the development of   this document: Jari Arkko, Stewart Bryant, Gonzalo Camarillo,   Lawrence Conroy, Michelle Cotton, Miguel Garcia, David Harrington,   Alfred Hoenes, Ari Keranen, Peter Koch, Edward Lewis, Alexey   Melnikov, Jon Peterson, Pekka Savola, and Peter Saint-Andre.   Lawrence Conroy has provided extensive text for the Enumservice   Classification section.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011Section 3 of [RFC3761], which was edited by Patrik Faltstrom and   Michael Mealling, has been incorporated into this document.  Please   see the Acknowledgments section inRFC 3761 for additional   acknowledgments.13.  References13.1.  Normative References   [RFC2026]  Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision              3",BCP 9,RFC 2026, October 1996.   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC3402]  Mealling, M., "Dynamic Delegation Discovery System (DDDS)              Part Two: The Algorithm",RFC 3402, October 2002.   [RFC3403]  Mealling, M., "Dynamic Delegation Discovery System (DDDS)              Part Three: The Domain Name System (DNS) Database",RFC 3403, October 2002.   [RFC3761]  Faltstrom, P. and M. Mealling, "The E.164 to Uniform              Resource Identifiers (URI) Dynamic Delegation Discovery              System (DDDS) Application (ENUM)",RFC 3761, April 2004.   [RFC3986]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform              Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,RFC 3986, January 2005.   [RFC5226]  Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an              IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 5226,              May 2008.   [RFC6116]  Bradner, S., Conroy, L., and K. Fujiwara, "The E.164 to              Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI) Dynamic Delegation              Discovery System (DDDS) Application (ENUM)",RFC 6116,              March 2011.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 201113.2.  Informative References   [ITU.E164.2005]              International Telecommunications Union, "The International              Public Telecommunication Numbering Plan", ITU-              T Recommendation E.164, Feb 2005.   [Instructions2authors]              Reynolds, J. and R. Braden, "Instructions to Request for              Comments (RFC) Authors", RFC Editorhttp://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc-editor/instructions2authors.txt,              August 2004.   [RFC1035]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and              specification", STD 13,RFC 1035, November 1987.   [RFC2223]  Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, "Instructions to RFC Authors",RFC 2223, October 1997.   [RFC2606]  Eastlake, D. and A. Panitz, "Reserved Top Level DNS              Names",BCP 32,RFC 2606, June 1999.   [RFC2780]  Bradner, S. and V. Paxson, "IANA Allocation Guidelines For              Values In the Internet Protocol and Related Headers",BCP 37,RFC 2780, March 2000.   [RFC3552]  Rescorla, E. and B. Korver, "Guidelines for Writing RFC              Text on Security Considerations",BCP 72,RFC 3552,              July 2003.   [RFC3764]  Peterson, J., "enumservice registration for Session              Initiation Protocol (SIP) Addresses-of-Record",RFC 3764,              April 2004.   [RFC3966]  Schulzrinne, H., "The tel URI for Telephone Numbers",RFC 3966, December 2004.   [RFC4238]  Vaudreuil, G., "Voice Message Routing Service",RFC 4238,              October 2005.   [RFC4759]  Stastny, R., Shockey, R., and L. Conroy, "The ENUM Dip              Indicator Parameter for the "tel" URI",RFC 4759,              December 2006.   [RFC4846]  Klensin, J. and D. Thaler, "Independent Submissions to the              RFC Editor",RFC 4846, July 2007.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 34]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   [RFC4969]  Mayrhofer, A., "IANA Registration for vCard Enumservice",RFC 4969, August 2007.   [RFC4979]  Mayrhofer, A., "IANA Registration for Enumservice 'XMPP'",RFC 4979, August 2007.   [RFC5234]  Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax              Specifications: ABNF", STD 68,RFC 5234, January 2008.   [RFC6118]  Hoeneisen, B. and A. Mayrhofer, "Update of Legacy IANA              Registrations of Enumservices",RFC 6118, March 2011.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 35]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011Appendix A.  IANA Registration Template Examples   This section contains non-normative examples of the XML-chunk-based   IANA Registration Template:   This is the first example:           <record>             <class>Protocol-Based</class>             <type>email</type>             <subtype>mailto</subtype>             <urischeme>mailto</urischeme>             <functionalspec>               <paragraph>                 This Enumservice indicates that the resource                 can be addressed by the associated URI in                 order to send an email.               </paragraph>             </functionalspec>             <security>               See <xref type="rfc" data="rfc4355"/>,Section 6.             </security>             <usage>COMMON</usage>             <registrationdocs>               <xref type="rfc" data="rfc4355"/>             </registrationdocs>             <requesters>               <xref type="person" data="Lawrence_Conroy"/>             </requesters>           </record>           <people>             <person>               <name>Lawrence Conroy</name>               <org>Siemens Roke Manor Research</org>               <uri>mailto:lwc@roke.co.uk</uri>               <updated>2008-11-20</updated>             </person>           </people>Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 36]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   This is the second example.           <record>             <class>Protocol-Based</class>             <type>xmpp</type>             <urischeme>xmpp</urischeme>             <functionalspec>               <paragraph>                 This Enumservice indicates that the                 resource identified is an XMPP entity.               </paragraph>             </functionalspec>             <security>               See <xref type="rfc" data="rfc4979"/>,Section 6.             </security>             <usage>COMMON</usage>             <registrationdocs>               <xref type="rfc" data="rfc4979"/>             </registrationdocs>             <requesters>               <xref type="person" data="Alexander_Mayrhofer"/>             </requesters>           </record>           <people>             <person>               <name>Alexander Mayrhofer</name>               <org>enum.at GmbH</org>               <uri>mailto:alexander.mayrhofer@enum.at</uri>               <updated>2008-10-10</updated>             </person>           </people>Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 37]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011   This is the third example:           <record>             <class>Application-Based</class>             <type>voicemsg</type>             <subtype>sip</subtype>             <urischeme>sip</urischeme>             <functionalspec>               <paragraph>                 This Enumservice indicates that the resource                 identified can be addressed by the associated                 URI scheme in order to initiate a voice                 communication session to a voice messaging system.               </paragraph>             </functionalspec>             <security>               See <xref type="rfc" data="rfc4279"/>,Section 3.             </security>             <usage>COMMON</usage>             <registrationdocs>               <xref type="rfc" data="rfc4279"/>             </registrationdocs>             <requesters>               <xref type="person" data="Jason_Livingood"/>               <xref type="person" data="Donald_Troshynski"/>             </requesters>             <additionalinfo>               <paragraph>                 Implementers should review a non-exclusive list of                 examples in <xref type="rfc" data="rfc4279"/>,Section 7.               </paragraph>             </additionalinfo>           </record>           <people>             <person>               <name>Jason Livingood</name>               <org>Comcast Cable Communications</org>               <uri>mailto:jason_livingood@cable.comcast.com</uri>               <updated>2008-11-20</updated>             </person>Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 38]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011             <person>               <name>Donald Troshynski</name>               <org>Acme Packet</org>               <uri>mailto:dtroshynski@acmepacket.com</uri>               <updated>2008-11-20</updated>             </person>           </people>   In the third IANA Registration Template example above, the "voicemsg"   Enumservice is used.  This Enumservice actually has several Subtypes,   and one of those is shown in the example.  For each Subtype, an   individual Registration Template must be submitted to IANA, so that   an Enumservice with several Subtypes will have several corresponding   IANA Registration Templates.  This is to avoid any ambiguity of the   relation between <subtype> and <urischeme> elements.Appendix B.  Changes fromRFC 3761   This section lists the changes applied to the Enumservice   registration process and the IANA registry definition, compared toRFC 3761.   o  WhileRFC 3761 required "Standards track or Experimental" RFCs for      an Enumservice to be registered, this document mandates      "Specification Required", which implies the use of a Designated      Expert.   o  This document defines the classification of Enumservices.  The      IANA Registration Template has been complemented to contain a      <class> element (Enumservice Class).   o  A new element <registrationdocs> (Enumservice Specification) has      been added to the IANA Registration Template.   o  The former field "Any other information that the author deems      interesting" of the IANA Registration Template turned into the      <additionalinfo> element (Further Information).   o  The Enumservice "Name" field has been removed from the IANA      Registration Template.   o  The Registration Template is now a chunk of XML data, reflecting      IANA's recent work to convert registries to XML.Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 39]

RFC 6117            IANA Registration of Enumservices         March 2011Authors' Addresses   Bernie Hoeneisen   Ucom Standards Track Solutions GmbH   CH-8000 Zuerich   Switzerland   Phone: +41 44 500 52 44   EMail: bernie@ietf.hoeneisen.ch (bernhard.hoeneisen AT ucom.ch)   URI:http://www.ucom.ch/   Alexander Mayrhofer   enum.at GmbH   Karlsplatz 1/9   Wien  A-1010   Austria   Phone: +43 1 5056416 34   EMail: alexander.mayrhofer@enum.at   URI:http://www.enum.at/   Jason Livingood   Comcast Cable Communications   One Comcast Center   1701 John F. Kennedy Boulevard   Philadelphia, PA 19103   USA   Phone: +1-215-286-7813   EMail: jason_livingood@cable.comcast.com   URI:http://www.comcast.com/Hoeneisen, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 40]

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