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IETF RFC 3299
Request for Comments Summary
Last modified on Saturday, December 13th, 2003
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Network Working Group S. Ginoza
Request for Comments: 3299 ISI
Category: Informational December 2003
Request for Comments Summary
RFC Numbers 3200-3299
Status of This Memo
This RFC is a slightly annotated list of the 100 RFCs from RFC 3200
through RFC 3299. This is a status report on these RFCs. This memo
provides information for the Internet community. It does not specify
an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this memo is
unlimited.
Copyright Notice
Copyright © The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved.
Note
Many RFCs, but not all, are Proposed Standards, Draft Standards, or
Standards. Since the status of these RFCs may change during the
standards processing, we note here only that they are on the
standards track. Please see the latest edition of "Internet Official
Protocol Standards" for the current state and status of these RFCs.
In the following, RFCs on the standards track are marked [STANDARDS
TRACK].
RFC Author Date Title
--- ------ ---- -----
3299 Ginoza Dec 2003 Request for Comments Summary
This memo.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 1
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3298 Faynberg Aug 2002 Service in the Public Switched
Telephone Network/Intelligent
Network (PSTN/IN) Requesting
InTernet Service (SPIRITS)
Protocol Requirements
This document describes the SPIRITS protocol requirements, based on the
architecture presented in RFC 3136. (SPIRITS stands for "Service in the
PSTN/IN Requesting InTernet Service".) The purpose of the protocol is
to support services that originate in the Public Switched Telephone
Network (PSTN) and necessitate the interactions between the PSTN and the
Internet. Similarly, such services are called SPIRITS services.
(Internet Call Waiting, Internet Caller-ID Delivery, and Internet Call
Forwarding are examples of SPIRIT services, but the protocol is to
define the building blocks from which many other services can be built.)
On the PSTN side, the SPIRITS services are initiated from the
Intelligent Network (IN) entities; the earlier IETF work on the
PSTN/Internet Interworking (PINT) resulted in the protocol (RFC 2848) in
support of the services initiated the other way around--from the
Internet to PSTN.
To this end, this document lists general requirements for the SPIRITS
protocol as well as those pertinent to IN, Wireless IN, and PINT
building blocks. The document also presents the SPIRITS WG consensus on
the choice of the SPIRITS signaling protocol. This memo provides
information for the Internet community.
3297 Klyne Jul 2002 Content Negotiation for
Messaging Services based on
Email
This memo describes a content negotiation mechanism for facsimile, voice
and other messaging services that use Internet email. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3296 Zeilenga Jul 2002 Named Subordinate References
in Lightweight Directory
Access Protocol (LDAP)
Directories
This document details schema and protocol elements for representing and
managing named subordinate references in Lightweight Directory Access
Protocol (LDAP) Directories. [STANDARDS TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 2
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3295 Sjostrand Jun 2002 Definitions of Managed Objects
for the General Switch
Management Protocol (GSMP)
This memo defines a portion of the Management Information Base (MIB) for
the use with the network management protocols in the Internet community.
In particular, it describes managed objects for the General Switch
Management Protocol (GSMP). [STANDARDS TRACK]
3294 Doria Jun 2002 General Switch Management
Protocol (GSMP) Applicability
This memo provides an overview of the GSMP (General Switch Management
Protocol) and includes information relating to its deployment in a IP
network in an MPLS environment. It does not discuss deployment in an
ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode) network or in a raw ethernet
configuration. This memo provides information for the Internet
community.
3293 Doria Jun 2002 General Switch Management
Protocol (GSMP) Packet
Encapsulations for
Asynchronous Transfer Mode
(ATM), Ethernet and
Transmission Control Protocol
(TCP)
This memo specifies the encapsulation of GSMP (General Switch Management
Protocol) packets in ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode), Ethernet and TCP
(Transmission Control Protocol). [STANDARDS TRACK]
3292 Doria Jun 2002 General Switch Management
Protocol (GSMP) V3
This document describes the General Switch Management Protocol Version 3
(GSMPv3). The GSMPv3 is an asymmetric protocol that allows one or more
external switch controllers to establish and maintain the state of a
label switch such as, an ATM, frame relay or MPLS switch. The GSMPv3
allows control of both unicast and multicast switch connection state as
well as control of switch system resources and QoS features. [STANDARDS
TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 3
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3291 Daniele May 2002 Textual Conventions for
Internet Network Addresses
This MIB module defines textual conventions to represent commonly used
Internet network layer addressing information. The intent is that these
textual conventions (TCs) will be imported and used in MIB modules that
would otherwise define their own representations. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3290 Bernet May 2002 An Informal Management Model
for Diffserv Routers
This document proposes an informal management model of Differentiated
Services (Diffserv) routers for use in their management and
configuration. This model defines functional datapath elements (e.g.,
classifiers, meters, actions, marking, absolute dropping, counting,
multiplexing), algorithmic droppers, queues and schedulers. It
describes possible configuration parameters for these elements and how
they might be interconnected to realize the range of traffic
conditioning and per-hop behavior (PHB) functionalities described in the
Diffserv Architecture. This memo provides information for the Internet
community.
3289 Baker May 2002 Management Information Base
for the Differentiated
Services Architecture
This memo describes an SMIv2 (Structure of Management Information
version 2) MIB for a device implementing the Differentiated Services
Architecture. It may be used both for monitoring and configuration of a
router or switch capable of Differentiated Services functionality.
[STANDARDS TRACK]
3288 O'Tuathail Jun 2002 Using the Simple Object Access
Protocol (SOAP) in Blocks
Extensible Exchange Protocol
(BEEP)
This memo specifies a Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) binding to
the Blocks Extensible Exchange Protocol core (BEEP). A SOAP binding
describes how SOAP messages are transmitted in the network. [STANDARDS
TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 4
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3287 Bierman Jul 2002 Remote Monitoring MIB
Extensions for
Differentiated Services
This memo defines a portion of the Management Information Base (MIB) for
use with network management protocols in the Internet community. In
particular, it describes managed objects used for monitoring
Differentiated Services (DS) Codepoint usage in packets which contain a
DS field, utilizing the monitoring framework defined in the RMON-2
(Remote Network Monitoring Management Version 2) MIB. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3286 Ong May 2002 An Introduction to the Stream
Control Transmission Protocol
(SCTP)
This document provides a high level introduction to the capabilities
supported by the Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP). It is
intended as a guide for potential users of SCTP as a general purpose
transport protocol. This memo provides information for the Internet
community.
3285 Gahrns May 2002 Using Microsoft Word to create
Internet Drafts and RFCs
This document describes the steps to configure the Microsoft Word
application to produce documents in Internet Draft and RFC format. This
memo provides information for the Internet community.
3284 Korn Jun 2002 The VCDIFF Generic
Differencing and Compression
Data Format
This memo describes VCDIFF, a general, efficient and portable data
format suitable for encoding compressed and/or differencing data so that
they can be easily transported among computers. [STANDARDS TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 5
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3283 Mahoney Jun 2002 Guide to Internet Calendaring
This document describes the various Internet calendaring and scheduling
standards and works in progress, and the relationships between them.
Its intent is to provide a context for these documents, assist in their
understanding, and potentially aid in the design of standards-based
calendaring and scheduling systems. The standards addressed are RFC
2445 (iCalendar), RFC 2446 (iTIP), and RFC 2447 (iMIP). The work in
progress addressed is "Calendar Access Protocol" (CAP). This document
also describes issues and problems that are not solved by these
protocols, and that could be targets for future work. This memo
provides information for the Internet community.
3282 Alvestrand May 2002 Content Language Headers
This document defines a "Content-language:" header, for use in cases
where one desires to indicate the language of something that has RFC
822-like headers, like MIME body parts or Web documents, and an
"Accept-Language:" header for use in cases where one wishes to indicate
one's preferences with regard to language. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3281 Farrell Apr 2002 An Internet Attribute
Certificate Profile for
Authorization
This specification defines a profile for the use of X.509 Attribute
Certificates in Internet Protocols. Attribute certificates may be used
in a wide range of applications and environments covering a broad
spectrum of interoperability goals and a broader spectrum of operational
and assurance requirements. The goal of this document is to establish a
common baseline for generic applications requiring broad
interoperability as well as limited special purpose requirements. The
profile places emphasis on attribute certificate support for Internet
electronic mail, IPSec, and WWW security applications. [STANDARDS
TRACK]
3280 Housley Apr 2002 Internet X.509 Public Key
Infrastructure Certificate and
Certificate Revocation List
(CRL) Profile
This memo profiles the X.509 v3 certificate and X.509 v2 Certificate
Revocation List (CRL) for use in the Internet. [STANDARDS TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 6
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3279 Polk Apr 2002 Algorithms and Identifiers for
the Internet X.509 Public Key
Infrastructure Certificate and
Certificate Revocation List
(CRL) Profile
This document specifies algorithm identifiers and ASN.1 encoding formats
for digital signatures and subject public keys used in the Internet
X.509 Public Key Infrastructure (PKI). Digital signatures are used to
sign certificates and certificate revocation list (CRLs). Certificates
include the public key of the named subject. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3278 Blake-Wilson Apr 2002 Use of Elliptic Curve
Cryptography (ECC) Algorithms
in Cryptographic Message
Syntax (CMS)
This document describes how to use Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC)
public-key algorithms in the Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS). The
ECC algorithms support the creation of digital signatures and the
exchange of keys to encrypt or authenticate content. The definition of
the algorithm processing is based on the ANSI X9.62 standard, developed
by the ANSI X9F1 working group, the IEEE 1363 standard, and the SEC 1
standard. This memo provides information for the Internet community.
3277 McPherson Apr 2002 Intermediate System to
Intermediate System (IS-IS)
Transient Blackhole Avoidance
This document describes a simple, interoperable mechanism that can be
employed in Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) networks
in order to decrease the data loss associated with deterministic
blackholing of packets during transient network conditions. The
mechanism proposed here requires no IS-IS protocol changes and is
completely interoperable with the existing IS-IS specification. This
memo provides information for the Internet community.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 7
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3276 Ray May 2002 Definitions of Managed Objects
for High Bit-Rate DSL - 2nd
generation (HDSL2) and
Single-Pair High-Speed Digital
Subscriber Line (SHDSL) Lines
This document defines a portion of the Management Information Base (MIB)
module for use with network management protocols in the Internet
community. In particular, it describes objects used for managing High
Bit-Rate DSL - 2nd generation (HDSL2) and Single-Pair High-Speed Digital
Subscriber Line (SHDSL) interfaces. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3275 Eastlake 3rd Mar 2002 (Extensible Markup Language)
XML-Signature Syntax and
Processing
This document specifies XML (Extensible Markup Language) digital
signature processing rules and syntax. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3274 Gutmann Jun 2002 Compressed Data Content Type
for Cryptographic Message
Syntax (CMS)
This document defines a format for using compressed data as a
Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) content type. Compressing data
before transmission provides a number of advantages, including the
elimination of data redundancy which could help an attacker, speeding up
processing by reducing the amount of data to be processed by later steps
(such as signing or encryption), and reducing overall message size.
Although there have been proposals for adding compression at other
levels (for example at the MIME or SSL level), these don't address the
problem of compression of CMS content unless the compression is supplied
by an external means (for example by intermixing MIME and CMS).
[STANDARDS TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 8
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3273 Waldbusser Jul 2002 Remote Network Monitoring
Management Information Base
for High Capacity Networks
This memo defines a portion of the Management Information Base (MIB) for
use with network management protocols in TCP/IP-based internets. In
particular, it defines objects for managing remote network monitoring
(RMON) devices for use on high speed networks. This document contains a
MIB Module that defines these new objects and also contains definitions
of some updated objects from the RMON-MIB in RFC 2819 and the RMON2-MIB
in RFC 2021. [PROPOSED STANDARD]
3272 Awduche May 2002 Overview and Principles of
Internet Traffic Engineering
This memo describes the principles of Traffic Engineering (TE) in the
Internet. The document is intended to promote better understanding of
the issues surrounding traffic engineering in IP networks, and to
provide a common basis for the development of traffic engineering
capabilities for the Internet. The principles, architectures, and
methodologies for performance evaluation and performance optimization of
operational IP networks are discussed throughout this document. This
memo provides information for the Internet community.
3271 Cerf Apr 2002 The Internet is for Everyone
This document expresses the Internet Society's ideology that the
Internet really is for everyone. However, it will only be such if we
make it so. This memo provides information for the Internet community.
3270 Le Faucheur May 2002 Multi-Protocol Label Switching
(MPLS) Support of
Differentiated Services
This document defines a flexible solution for support of Differentiated
Services (Diff-Serv) over Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS)
networks. [STANDARDS TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 9
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3269 Kermode Apr 2002 Author Guidelines for Reliable
Multicast Transport (RMT)
Building Blocks and Protocol
Instantiation documents
This document provides general guidelines to assist the authors of
Reliable Multicast Transport (RMT) building block and protocol
instantiation definitions. The purpose of these guidelines is to ensure
that any building block and protocol instantiation definitions produced
contain sufficient information to fully explain their operation and use.
In addition these guidelines provide directions to specify modular and
clearly defined RMT building blocks and protocol instantiations that can
be refined and augmented to safely create new protocols for use in new
scenarios for which any existing protocols were not designed. This memo
provides information for the Internet community.
3268 Chown Jun 2002 Advanced Encryption Standard
(AES) Ciphersuites for
Transport Layer Security (TLS)
This document proposes several new ciphersuites. At present, the
symmetric ciphers supported by Transport Layer Security (TLS) are RC2,
RC4, International Data Encryption Algorithm (IDEA), Data Encryption
Standard (DES), and triple DES. The protocol would be enhanced by the
addition of Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) ciphersuites. [STANDARDS
TRACK]
3267 Sjoberg Jun 2002 Real-Time Transport Protocol
(RTP) Payload Format and File
Storage Format for the
Adaptive Multi-Rate (AMR) and
Adaptive Multi-Rate Wideband
(AMR-WB) Audio Codecs
This document specifies a real-time transport protocol (RTP) payload
format to be used for Adaptive Multi-Rate (AMR) and Adaptive Multi-Rate
Wideband (AMR-WB) encoded speech signals. The payload format is
designed to be able to interoperate with existing AMR and AMR-WB
transport formats on non-IP networks. In addition, a file format is
specified for transport of AMR and AMR-WB speech data in storage mode
applications such as email. Two separate MIME type registrations are
included, one for AMR and one for AMR-WB, specifying use of both the RTP
payload format and the storage format. [STANDARDS TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 10
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3266 Olson Jun 2002 Support for IPv6 in Session
Description Protocol (SDP)
This document describes the use of Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6)
addresses in conjunction with the Session Description Protocol (SDP).
Specifically, this document clarifies existing text in SDP with regards
to the syntax of IPv6 addresses. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3265 Roach Jun 2002 Session Initiation Protocol
(SIP)-Specific Event
Notification
This document describes an extension to the Session Initiation Protocol
(SIP). The purpose of this extension is to provide an extensible
framework by which SIP nodes can request notification from remote nodes
indicating that certain events have occurred. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3264 Rosenberg Jun 2002 An Offer/Answer Model with the
Session Description Protocol
(SDP)
This document defines a mechanism by which two entities can make use of
the Session Description Protocol (SDP) to arrive at a common view of a
multimedia session between them. In the model, one participant offers
the other a description of the desired session from their perspective,
and the other participant answers with the desired session from their
perspective. This offer/answer model is most useful in unicast sessions
where information from both participants is needed for the complete view
of the session. The offer/answer model is used by protocols like the
Session Initiation Protocol (SIP). [STANDARDS TRACK]
3263 Rosenberg Jun 2002 Session Initiation Protocol
(SIP): Locating SIP Servers
The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) uses DNS procedures to allow a
client to resolve a SIP Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) into the IP
address, port, and transport protocol of the next hop to contact. It
also uses DNS to allow a server to send a response to a backup client if
the primary client has failed. This document describes those DNS
procedures in detail. [STANDARDS TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 11
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3262 Rosenberg Jun 2002 Reliability of Provisional
Responses in the Session
Initiation Protocol (SIP)
This document specifies an extension to the Session Initiation Protocol
(SIP) providing reliable provisional response messages. This extension
uses the option tag 100rel and defines the Provisional Response
ACKnowledgement (PRACK) method. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3261 Rosenberg Jun 2002 SIP: Session Initiation
Protocol
This document describes Session Initiation Protocol (SIP), an
application-layer control (signaling) protocol for creating, modifying,
and terminating sessions with one or more participants. These sessions
include Internet telephone calls, multimedia distribution, and
multimedia conferences. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3260 Grossman Apr 2002 New Terminology and
Clarifications for Diffserv
This memo captures Diffserv working group agreements concerning new and
improved terminology, and provides minor technical clarifications. It
is intended to update RFC 2474, RFC 2475 and RFC 2597. When RFCs 2474
and 2597 advance on the standards track, and RFC 2475 is updated, it is
intended that the revisions in this memo will be incorporated, and that
this memo will be obsoleted by the new RFCs. This memo provides
information for the Internet community.
3259 Ott Apr 2002 A Message Bus for Local
Coordination
The local Message Bus (Mbus) is a light-weight message-oriented
coordination protocol for group communication between application
components. The Mbus provides automatic location of communication
peers, subject based addressing, reliable message transfer and different
types of communication schemes. The protocol is layered on top of IP
multicast and is specified for IPv4 and IPv6. The IP multicast scope is
limited to link-local multicast. This document specifies the Mbus
protocol, i.e., message syntax, addressing and transport mechanisms.
This memo provides information for the Internet community.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 12
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3258 Hardie Apr 2002 Distributing Authoritative
Name Servers via Shared
Unicast Addresses
This memo describes a set of practices intended to enable an
authoritative name server operator to provide access to a single named
server in multiple locations. The primary motivation for the
development and deployment of these practices is to increase the
distribution of Domain Name System (DNS) servers to previously under-
served areas of the network topology and to reduce the latency for DNS
query responses in those areas. This memo provides information for the
Internet community.
3257 Coene Apr 2002 Stream Control Transmission
Protocol Applicability
Statement
This document describes the applicability of the Stream Control
Transmission Protocol (SCTP). It also contrasts SCTP with the two
dominant transport protocols, User Datagram Protocol (UDP) &
Transmission Control Protocol (TCP), and gives some guidelines for when
best to use SCTP and when not best to use SCTP. This memo provides
information for the Internet community.
3256 Jones Apr 2002 The DOCSIS (Data-Over-Cable
Service Interface
Specifications) Device Class
DHCP (Dynamic Host
Configuration Protocol) Relay
Agent Information Sub-option
This document proposes a new sub-option to the DHCP (Dynamic Host
Configuration Protocol) Relay Agent Information Option. [STANDARDS
TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 13
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3255 Jones Apr 2002 Extending Point-to-Point
Protocol (PPP) over
Synchronous Optical
NETwork/Synchronous Digital
Hierarchy (SONET/SDH) with
virtual concatenation, high
order and low order payloads
This document describes an extension to the mapping of Point-to-Point
Protocol (PPP) into Synchronous Optical NETwork/Synchronous Digital
Hierarchy (SONET/SDH) to include the use of SONET/SDH SPE/VC virtual
concatenation and the use of both high order and low order payloads.
[STANDARDS TRACK]
3254 Alvestrand Apr 2002 Definitions for talking about
directories
When discussing systems for making information accessible through the
Internet in standardized ways, it may be useful if the people who are
discussing it have a common understanding of the terms they use. For
example, a reference to this document would give one the power to agree
that the DNS (Domain Name System) is a global lookup repository with
perimeter integrity and loose, converging consistency. On the other
hand, a LDAP (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol) directory server is
a local, centralized repository with both lookup and search capability.
This document discusses one group of such systems which is known under
the term, "directories". This memo provides information for the
Internet community.
3253 Clemm Mar 2002 Versioning Extensions to
WebDAV (Web Distributed
Authoring and Versioning)
This document specifies a set of methods, headers, and resource types
that define the WebDAV (Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning)
versioning extensions to the HTTP/1.1 protocol. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3252 Kennedy 1 April 2002 Binary Lexical Octet Ad-hoc
Transport
This document defines a reformulation of IP and two transport layer
protocols (TCP and UDP) as XML applications. This memo provides
information for the Internet community.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 14
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3251 Rajagopalan 1 April 2002 Electricity over IP
Mostly Pointless Lamp Switching (MPLampS) is an architecture for
carrying electricity over IP (with an MPLS control plane). According to
our marketing department, MPLampS has the potential to dramatically
lower the price, ease the distribution and usage, and improve the
manageability of delivering electricity. This document is motivated by
such work as SONET/SDH over IP/MPLS (with apologies to the authors).
Readers of the previous work have been observed scratching their heads
and muttering, "What next?". This document answers that question. This
memo provides information for the Internet community.
3250 McIntyre Sep 2002 Tag Image File Format Fax
eXtended (TIFF-FX) -
image/tiff-fx MIME Sub-type
Registration
This document describes the registration of the MIME sub-type
image/tiff-fx. The encodings are defined by File Format for Internet
Fax and its extensions. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3249 Cancio Sep 2002 Implementers Guide for
Facsimile Using Internet Mail
This document is intended for the implementers of software that use
email to send to facsimiles using RFC 2305 and 2532. This is an
informational document and its guidelines do not supersede the
referenced documents. This memo provides information for the Internet
community.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 15
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3248 Armitage Mar 2002 A Delay Bound alternative
revision of RFC 2598
For historical interest, this document captures the EF Design Team's
proposed solution, preferred by the original authors of RFC 2598 but not
adopted by the working group in December 2000. The original definition
of EF was based on comparison of forwarding on an unloaded network.
This experimental Delay Bound (DB) PHB requires a bound on the delay of
packets due to other traffic in the network. At the Pittsburgh IETF
meeting in August 2000, the Differentiated Services working group faced
serious questions regarding RFC 2598 - the group's standards track
definition of the Expedited Forwarding (EF) Per Hop Behavior (PHB). An
'EF Design Team' volunteered to develop a re-expression of RFC 2598,
bearing in mind the issues raised in the DiffServ group. At the San
Diego IETF meeting in December 2000 the DiffServ working group decided
to pursue an alternative re-expression of the EF PHB. This memo
provides information for the Internet community.
3247 Charny Mar 2002 Supplemental Information for
the New Definition of the EF
PHB (Expedited Forwarding
Per-Hop Behavior)
This document was written during the process of clarification of RFC 2598
"An Expedited Forwarding PHB" that led to the publication of revised
specification of EF "An Expedited Forwarding PHB". Its primary
motivation is providing additional explanation to the revised EF
definition and its properties. The document also provides additional
implementation examples and gives some guidance for computation of the
numerical parameters of the new definition for several well known
schedulers and router architectures. This memo provides information for
the Internet community.
3246 Davie Mar 2002 An Expedited Forwarding PHB
(Per-Hop Behavior)
This document defines a PHB (per-hop behavior) called Expedited
Forwarding (EF). The PHB is a basic building block in the
Differentiated Services architecture. EF is intended to provide a
building block for low delay, low jitter and low loss services by
ensuring that the EF aggregate is served at a certain configured rate.
This document obsoletes RFC 2598. [STANDARDS TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 16
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3245 Klensin, Ed. Mar 2002 The History and Context of
Telephone Number Mapping
(ENUM) Operational Decisions:
Informational Documents
Contributed to ITU-T Study
Group 2 (SG2)
RFC 2916 assigned responsibility for a number of administrative and
operational details of Telephone Number Mapping (ENUM) to the IAB. It
also anticipated that ITU would take responsibility for determining the
legitimacy and appropriateness of applicants for delegation of "country
code"-level subdomains of the top-level ENUM domain. Recently, three
memos have been prepared for the ITU-T Study Group 2 (SG2) to explain
the background of, and reasoning for, the relevant decisions. The IAB
has also supplied a set of procedural instructions to the RIPE NCC for
implementation of their part of the model. The content of the three
memos is provided in this document for the information of the IETF
community.
3244 Swift Feb 2002 Microsoft Windows 2000
Kerberos Change Password and
Set Password Protocols
This memo specifies Microsoft's Windows 2000 Kerberos change password
and set password protocols. The Windows 2000 Kerberos change password
protocol interoperates with the original Kerberos change password
protocol. Change password is a request reply protocol that includes a
KRB_PRIV message that contains the new password for the user. This memo
provides information for the Internet community.
3243 Jonsson Apr 2002 RObust Header Compression
(ROHC): Requirements and
Assumptions for 0-byte
IP/UDP/RTP Compression
This document contains requirements for the 0-byte IP/UDP/RTP (Internet
Protocol/User Datagram Protocol/Real-Time Transport Protocol) header
compression scheme to be developed by the Robust Header Compression
(ROHC) Working Group. It also includes the basic assumptions for the
typical link layers over which 0-byte compression may be implemented,
and assumptions about its usage in general.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 17
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3242 Jonsson Apr 2002 RObust Header Compression
(ROHC): A Link-Layer Assisted
Profile for IP/UDP/RTP
This document defines a ROHC (Robust Header Compression) profile for
compression of IP/UDP/RTP (Internet Protocol/User Datagram
Protocol/Real-Time Transport Protocol) packets, utilizing functionality
provided by the lower layers to increase compression efficiency by
completely eliminating the header for most packets during optimal
operation. The profile is built as an extension to the ROHC RTP
profile. It defines additional mechanisms needed in ROHC, states
requirements on the assisting layer to guarantee transparency, and
specifies general logic for compression and decompression making use of
this header-free packet. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3241 Bormann Apr 2002 Robust Header Compression
(ROHC) over PPP
This document describes an option for negotiating the use of robust
header compression (ROHC) on IP datagrams transmitted over the Point-
to-Point Protocol (PPP). It defines extensions to the PPP Control
Protocols for IPv4 and IPv6. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3240 Clunie Feb 2002 Digital Imaging and
Communications in Medicine
(DICOM) - Application/dicom
MIME Sub-type Registration
This document describes the registration of the MIME sub-type
application/dicom (Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine). The
baseline encoding is defined by the DICOM Standards Committee in
"Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine". This memo provides
information for the Internet community.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 18
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3239 Kugler Feb 2002 Internet Printing Protocol
(IPP): Requirements for Job,
Printer, and Device
Administrative Operations
This document specifies the requirements and uses cases for some
optional administrative operations for use with the Internet Printing
Protocol (IPP) version 1.0 and version 1.1. Some of these
administrative operations operate on the IPP Job and Printer objects.
The remaining operations operate on a new Device object that more
closely models a single output device. This memo provides information
for the Internet community.
3238 IAB Jan 2002 IAB Architectural and Policy
Considerations for Open
Pluggable Edge Services
This document includes comments and recommendations by the IAB on some
architectural and policy issues related to the chartering of Open
Pluggable Edge Services (OPES) in the IETF. OPES are services that
would be deployed at application-level intermediaries in the network,
for example, at a web proxy cache between the origin server and the
client. These intermediaries would transform or filter content, with
the explicit consent of either the content provider or the end user.
This memo provides information for the Internet community.
3237 Tuexen Jan 2002 Requirements for Reliable
Server Pooling
This document defines a basic set of requirements for reliable server
pooling. This memo provides information for the Internet community.
3236 Baker Feb 2002 The 'application/xhtml+xml'
Media Type
This document defines the 'application/xhtml+xml' MIME media type for
XHTML based markup languages; it is not intended to obsolete any
previous IETF documents, in particular RFC 2854 which registers
'text/html'. This memo provides information for the Internet community.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 19
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3235 Senie Jan 2002 Network Address Translator
(NAT)-Friendly Application
Design Guidelines
This document discusses those things that application designers might
wish to consider when designing new protocols. While many common
Internet applications will operate cleanly in the presence of Network
Address Translators, others suffer from a variety of problems when
crossing these devices. Guidelines are presented herein to help ensure
new protocols and applications will, to the extent possible, be
compatible with NAT (Network Address Translation). This memo provides
information for the Internet community.
3234 Carpenter Feb 2002 Middleboxes: Taxonomy and
Issues
This document is intended as part of an IETF discussion about
"middleboxes" - defined as any intermediary box performing functions
apart from normal, standard functions of an IP router on the data path
between a source host and destination host. This document establishes a
catalogue or taxonomy of middleboxes, cites previous and current IETF
work concerning middleboxes, and attempts to identify some preliminary
conclusions. It does not, however, claim to be definitive. This memo
provides information for the Internet community.
3233 Hoffman Feb 2002 Defining the IETF
This document gives a more concrete definition of "the IETF" as it
understood today. Many RFCs refer to "the IETF". Many important IETF
documents speak of the IETF as if it were an already-defined entity.
However, no IETF document correctly defines what the IETF is. This
document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet
Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.
3232 Reynolds Jan 2002 Assigned Numbers: RFC 1700 is
Replaced by an On-line Database
This memo obsoletes RFC 1700 (STD 2) "Assigned Numbers", which contained
an October 1994 snapshot of assigned Internet protocol parameters. This
memo provides information for the Internet community.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 20
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3231 Levi Jan 2002 Definitions of Managed Objects
for Scheduling Management
Operations
This memo defines a portion of the Management Information Base (MIB) for
use with network management protocols in the Internet community. In
particular, it describes a set of managed objects that are used to
schedule management operations periodically or at specified dates and
times. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3230 Mogul Jan 2002 Instance Digests in HTTP
HTTP/1.1 defines a Content-MD5 header that allows a server to include a
digest of the response body. However, this is specifically defined to
cover the body of the actual message, not the contents of the full file
(which might be quite different, if the response is a Content-Range, or
uses a delta encoding). Also, the Content-MD5 is limited to one
specific digest algorithm; other algorithms, such as SHA-1 (Secure Hash
Standard), may be more appropriate in some circumstances. Finally,
HTTP/1.1 provides no explicit mechanism by which a client may request a
digest. This document proposes HTTP extensions that solve these
problems. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3229 Mogul Jan 2002 Delta encoding in HTTP
This document describes how delta encoding can be supported as a
compatible extension to HTTP/1.1. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3228 Fenner Feb 2002 IANA Considerations for IPv4
Internet Group Management
Protocol (IGMP)
This memo requests that the IANA create a registry for fields in the
IGMP (Internet Group Management Protocol) protocol header, and provides
guidance for the IANA to use in assigning parameters for those fields.
This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the
Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
improvements.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 21
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3227 Brezinski Feb 2002 Guidelines for Evidence
Collection and Archiving
A "security incident" as defined in the "Internet Security Glossary",
RFC 2828, is a security-relevant system event in which the system's
security policy is disobeyed or otherwise breached. The purpose of this
document is to provide System Administrators with guidelines on the
collection and archiving of evidence relevant to such a security
incident. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices
for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
improvements.
3226 Gudmundsson Dec 2001 DNSSEC and IPv6 A6 aware
server/resolver message size
requirements
This document mandates support for EDNS0 (Extension Mechanisms for DNS)
in DNS entities claiming to support either DNS Security Extensions or A6
records. This requirement is necessary because these new features
increase the size of DNS messages. If EDNS0 is not supported fall back
to TCP will happen, having a detrimental impact on query latency and DNS
server load. This document updates RFC 2535 and RFC 2874, by adding new
requirements. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3225 Conrad Dec 2001 Indicating Resolver Support of
DNSSEC
In order to deploy DNSSEC (Domain Name System Security Extensions)
operationally, DNSSEC aware servers should only perform automatic
inclusion of DNSSEC RRs when there is an explicit indication that the
resolver can understand those RRs. This document proposes the use of a
bit in the EDNS0 header to provide that explicit indication and
describes the necessary protocol changes to implement that notification.
[STANDARDS TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 22
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3224 Guttman Jan 2002 Vendor Extensions for Service
Location Protocol, Version 2
This document specifies how the features of the Service Location
Protocol, Version 2 allow for vendor extensibility safely, with no
possibility of collisions. The specification introduces a new SLPv2
extension: The Vendor Opaque Extension. While proprietary protocol
extensions are not encouraged by IETF standards, it is important that
they not hinder interoperability of compliant implementations when they
are undertaken. This document udpates RFC 2608, "The Service Location
Protocol." [STANDARDS TRACK]
3223 Never Issued
RFC 3223 was never issued.
3222 Trotter Dec 2001 Terminology for Forwarding
Information Base (FIB) based
Router Performance
This document describes the terms to be used in a methodology that
determines the IP packet forwarding performance of IP routers as a
function of the forwarding information base installed within a router.
The forwarding performance of an IP router may be dependent upon or may
be linked to the composition and size of the forwarding information base
installed within a router. This memo provides information for the
Internet community.
3221 Huston Dec 2001 Commentary on Inter-Domain
Routing in the Internet
This document examines the various longer term trends visible within the
characteristics of the Internet's BGP table and identifies a number of
operational practices and protocol factors that contribute to these
trends. The potential impacts of these practices and protocol
properties on the scaling properties of the inter-domain routing space
are examined. This memo provides information for the Internet
community.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 23
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3220 Perkins Jan 2002 IP Mobility Support for IPv4
This document specifies protocol enhancements that allow transparent
routing of IP datagrams to mobile nodes in the Internet. Each mobile
node is always identified by its home address, regardless of its current
point of attachment to the Internet. While situated away from its home,
a mobile node is also associated with a care-of address, which provides
information about its current point of attachment to the Internet. The
protocol provides for registering the care-of address with a home agent.
The home agent sends datagrams destined for the mobile node through a
tunnel to the care-of address. After arriving at the end of the tunnel,
each datagram is then delivered to the mobile node. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3219 Rosenberg Jan 2002 Telephony Routing over IP
(TRIP)
This document presents the Telephony Routing over IP (TRIP). TRIP is a
policy driven inter-administrative domain protocol for advertising the
reachability of telephony destinations between location servers, and for
advertising attributes of the routes to those destinations. TRIP's
operation is independent of any signaling protocol, hence TRIP can serve
as the telephony routing protocol for any signaling protocol.
[STANDARDS TRACK]
3218 Rescorla Jan 2002 Preventing the Million Message
Attack on Cryptographic
Message Syntax
This memo describes a strategy for resisting the Million Message Attack.
This memo provides information for the Internet community.
3217 Housley Dec 2001 Triple-DES and RC2 Key
Wrapping
This document specifies the algorithm for wrapping one Triple-DES key
with another Triple-DES key and the algorithm for wrapping one RC2 key
with another RC2 key. This memo provides information for the Internet
community.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 24
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3216 Elliott Dec 2001 SMIng Objectives
This document describes the objectives for a new data definition
language, suitable for the modeling of network management constructs,
that can be directly mapped into SNMP and COPS-PR protocol operations.
This memo provides information for the Internet community.
3215 Boscher Jan 2002 LDP State Machine
This document provides state machine tables for ATM (Asynchronous
Transfer Mode) switch LSRs. In the current LDP specification, there is
no state machine specified for processing LDP messages. We think that
defining a common state machine is very important for interoperability
between different LDP and CR-LDP implementations. This memo provides
information for the Internet community.
3214 Ash Jan 2002 LSP Modification Using CR-LDP
This document presents an approach to modify the bandwidth and possibly
other parameters of an established CR-LSP (Constraint-based Routed Label
Switched Paths) using CR-LDP (Constraint-based Routed Label Distribution
Protocol) without service interruption. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3213 Ash Jan 2002 Applicability Statement for
CR-LDP
This document discusses the applicability of Constraint-Based LSP Setup
using LDP. It discusses possible network applications, extensions to
Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) required to implement constraint-based
routing, guidelines for deployment and known limitations of the
protocol. This document is a prerequisite to advancing CR-LDP on the
standards track. This memo provides information for the Internet
community.
3212 Jamoussi Jan 2002 Constraint-Based LSP Setup
using LDP
This document specifies mechanisms and TLVs (Type/Length/Value) for
support of CR-LSPs (constraint-based routed Label Switched Path) using
LDP (Label Distribution Protocol). [STANDARDS TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 25
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3211 Gutmann Dec 2001 Password-based Encryption for
CMS
This document provides a method of encrypting data using user-supplied
passwords and, by extension, any form of variable-length keying material
which is not necessarily an algorithm-specific fixed-format key. The
Cryptographic Message Syntax data format does not currently contain any
provisions for password-based data encryption. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3210 Awduche Dec 2001 Applicability Statement for
Extensions to RSVP for
LSP-Tunnels
This memo discusses the applicability of "Extensions to RSVP (Resource
ReSerVation Protocol) for LSP Tunnels". It highlights the protocol's
principles of operation and describes the network context for which it
was designed. Guidelines for deployment are offered and known protocol
limitations are indicated. This document is intended to accompany the
submission of "Extensions to RSVP for LSP Tunnels" onto the Internet
standards track. This memo provides information for the Internet
community.
3209 Awduche Dec 2001 RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP
for LSP Tunnels
This document describes the use of RSVP (Resource Reservation Protocol),
including all the necessary extensions, to establish label-switched
paths (LSPs) in MPLS (Multi-Protocol Label Switching). Since the flow
along an LSP is completely identified by the label applied at the
ingress node of the path, these paths may be treated as tunnels. A key
application of LSP tunnels is traffic engineering with MPLS as specified
in RFC 2702. [STANDARDS TRACK]
Ginoza Informational PAGE 26
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3208 Speakman Dec 2001 PGM Reliable Transport
Protocol Specification
Pragmatic General Multicast (PGM) is a reliable multicast transport
protocol for applications that require ordered or unordered, duplicate-
free, multicast data delivery from multiple sources to multiple
receivers. PGM guarantees that a receiver in the group either receives
all data packets from transmissions and repairs, or is able to detect
unrecoverable data packet loss. PGM is specifically intended as a
workable solution for multicast applications with basic reliability
requirements. Its central design goal is simplicity of operation with
due regard for scalability and network efficiency. This memo defines an
Experimental Protocol for the Internet community.
3207 Hoffman Feb 2002 SMTP Service Extension for
Secure SMTP over Transport
Layer Security
This document describes an extension to the SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer
Protocol) service that allows an SMTP server and client to use TLS
(Transport Layer Security) to provide private, authenticated
communication over the Internet. This gives SMTP agents the ability to
protect some or all of their communications from eavesdroppers and
attackers. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3206 Gellens Feb 2002 The SYS and AUTH POP Response
Codes
This memo proposes two response codes: SYS and AUTH, which enable
clients to unambiguously determine an optimal response to an
authentication failure. In addition, a new capability (AUTH-RESP-CODE)
is defined. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3205 Moore Feb 2002 On the use of HTTP as a
Substrate
Recently there has been widespread interest in using Hypertext Transfer
Protocol (HTTP) as a substrate for other applications-level protocols.
This document recommends technical particulars of such use, including
use of default ports, URL schemes, and HTTP security mechanisms. This
document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet
Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 27
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
3204 Zimmerer Dec 2001 MIME media types for ISUP and
QSIG Objects
This document describes MIME types for application/ISUP and
application/QSIG objects for use in SIP applications, according to the
rules defined in RFC 2048. These types can be used to identify ISUP and
QSIG objects within a SIP message such as INVITE or INFO, as might be
implemented when using SIP in an environment where part of the call
involves interworking to the PSTN. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3203 T'Joens Dec 2001 DHCP reconfigure extension
This document defines extensions to DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol) to allow dynamic reconfiguration of a single host triggered by
the DHCP server (e.g., a new IP address and/or local configuration
parameters). [STANDARDS TRACK]
3202 Steinberger Jan 2002 Definitions of Managed Objects
for Frame Relay Service Level
Definitions
This memo defines an extension of the Management Information Base (MIB)
for use with network management protocols in TCP/IP-based internets. In
particular, it defines objects for managing the Frame Relay Service
Level Definitions. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3201 Steinberger Jan 2002 Definitions of Managed Objects
for Circuit to Interface
Translation
This memo defines an extension of the Management Information Base (MIB)
for use with network management protocols in TCP/IP-based internets. In
particular, it defines objects for managing the insertion of interesting
Circuit Interfaces into the ifTable. This is important for circuits
that must be used within other MIB modules which require an ifEntry. It
allows for integrated monitoring of circuits as well as routing to
circuits using unaltered, pre-existing MIB modules. [STANDARDS TRACK]
3200 Never Issued
RFC 3200 was never issued.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 28
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
Security Considerations
Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
Author's Address
Sandy Ginoza
University of Southern California
Information Sciences Institute
4676 Admiralty Way
Marina del Rey, CA 90292
Phone: (310) 822-1511
EMail: ginoza@isi.edu
Ginoza Informational PAGE 29
RFC 3299 Summary of 3200-3299 December 2003
Full Copyright Statement
Copyright © The Internet Society (2003). 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.
Ginoza Informational PAGE 30
Request for Comments Summary
RFC TOTAL SIZE: 63813 bytes
PUBLICATION DATE: Saturday, December 13th, 2003
LEGAL RIGHTS: The IETF Trust (see BCP 78)
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