Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                   J. Winterbottom
Request for Comments: 5964                                    M. Thomson
Category: Standards Track                             Andrew Corporation
ISSN: 2070-1721                                              August 2010


      Specifying Holes in Location-to-Service Translation (LoST)
                          Service Boundaries

Abstract

  This document describes how holes can be specified in geodetic
  service boundaries.  One means of implementing a search solution in a
  service database, such as one might provide with a Location-to-
  Service Translation (LoST) server, is described.

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 in Section 2 of RFC 5741.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5964.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

  This document is subject to BCP 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.







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RFC 5964                 Service Boundary Holes              August 2010


Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
  2. Terminology .....................................................3
  3. Specifying Holes ................................................3
  4. GML Polygons ....................................................6
  5. Holes in GML Polygons ...........................................6
  6. Service Boundary Specification and Selection Algorithm ..........7
  7. Security Considerations ........................................10
  8. Acknowledgements ...............................................10
  9. References .....................................................10
     9.1. Normative References ......................................10
     9.2. Informative References ....................................10

1.  Introduction

  The LoST protocol [RFC5222] maps service and locations to destination
  addresses.  A LoST server does this by provisioning boundary maps or
  areas against service URNs.  The boundary is a polygon made up of
  sets of geodetic coordinates specifying an enclosed area.  In some
  circumstances, an area enclosed by a polygon, also known as an
  exterior polygon, may contain exception areas, or holes, that for the
  same service must yield a different destination to that described by
  the larger area.

  This document describes a profile of Geographic Markup Language (GML)
  [ISO-19107] polygons that constrains their representation when used
  for describing service boundaries.  The profile removes a number of
  permutations that are difficult to process.  This allows for
  simplified implementations that are not capable of handling all
  potential variations allowed by GML.  A fully conformant GML
  implementation must produce polygons that fit this profile to ensure
  interoperability.


















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RFC 5964                 Service Boundary Holes              August 2010


      o--------------o
     /                \
    /    /\            \
   /    + +-----+       \
  o     |  Hole  \       o
  |     |    1   /       |
  |     +-------+        |<--- Primary Polygon
  |        +-------+     |
  |       /  Hole  |     |
  o       \   2    |     o
   \       +-----+ +    /
    \             \/   /
     \                /
      o--------------o

  Figure 1: Holes in a Polygon

  This document describes a profile of GML [ISO-19107] polygons that
  constrains their representation when used for describing service
  boundaries.

  The working group considered that the types of regions described in
  this memo could be represented in various ways as polygons without
  holes, but concluded on the recommendations here to avoid potential
  problems with the arbitrary division of regions and to align with
  existing geospatial system practices.

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].

3.  Specifying Holes

  Holes related to an exterior boundary polygon MUST adhere to the
  following rules:

  Rule 1:   Two holes MUST NOT have more than one point of
            intersection.

  If two or more holes overlap or share a common boundary, then these
  represent a single hole.  The internal elements (holes) should have
  common boundaries removed and a single hole created irrespective of
  whether the excluded area is itself made up of multiple service
  boundaries.





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      o--------------o                      o--------------o
     /                \                    /                \
    /    /\            \                  /    /\            \
   /    + +-----+       \                /    + +-----+       \
  o     |  Hole  \       o              o     |        \       o
  |     |    1    \      |              |     |  One    \      |
  |     +-+-------+      |  =========>  |     +-+  Hole +      |
  |       /  Hole  |     |              |       /        |     |
  o       \   2    |     o              o       \        |     o
   \       +-----+ +    /                \       +-----+ +    /
    \             \/   /                  \             \/   /
     \                /                    \                /
      o--------------o                      o--------------o

         Incorrect                              Correct

           Figure 2: Hole Specification with Boundary Sharing

  Rule 2:   A polygon MUST describe a contiguous region.

  If a hole overlaps with the outer boundary, or it shares part of a
  side with the outer boundary, then it has an inlet and it MUST be
  expressed without the hole.

             +------- Inlet
             |
             v
      o---+-----+----o                     o---o     o----o
     /    |%%%%%|     \                   /    |     |     \
    /    /%%%%%%|      \                 /    /      |      \
   /    +%%%%%%%|       \               /    o       o       \
  o     |%%%%%%%%\       o             o     |        \       o
  |     |%%%%%%%%%\      |             |     |         \      |
  |     +-+%%%%%%%%+     |  ========>  |     o-o        o     |
  |       /%%%%%%%%|     |             |       /        |     |
  o       \%%%%%%%%|     o             o       \        |     o
   \       +-----+ +    /               \       o-----o o    /
    \             \/   /                 \             \/   /
     \                /                   \                /
      o--------------o                     o--------------o

         Incorrect                             Correct

                   Figure 3: Specification of an Inlet

  If a hole touches the outer boundary in two places, the region MUST
  be expressed as two separate polygons.




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RFC 5964                 Service Boundary Holes              August 2010


      A--q-----------B                     A-q   q----------B
     /  | |           \                   /  |   |           \
    /   | |            \                 /   |   |            \
   /    z r-----s       \               / P  z   r-----s   P   \
  H     |        \       C             H  o  |          \   o   C
  |     |  One    \      |             |  l  |           \   l  |
  |     y-x  Hole  t     |  ========>  |  y  y-x          t  y  |
  |       /        |     |             |  g    /          |  g  |
  G       \        |     D             G  o    \          |  o  D
   \      /    v---u    /               \ n    /      v---u  n /
    \     \   /        /                 \  1  \     /      2 /
     \     \ /        /                   \     \   /        /
      F-----w--------E                     F-----w w--------E

         Incorrect                               Correct

      Figure 4: Specification of Hole with Multiple Outer-Boundary
                              Intersections

  Similarly, a polygon that is enclosed entirely within a hole from
  another polygon (i.e., an "island") is a separate polygon.

         o--------------o
        /                \
       / +--------------+ \
      /  |%%%%%%%%%%%%%%|  \
     o   |%%o--------o%%|   o
     |   |%/  Island  \%|   |
     |   |%\          /%|   |
     |   |%%o--------o%%|   |
     o   |%%%%%%%%%%%%%%|   o
      \  +--------------+  /
       \                  /
        \                /
         o--------------o

  Figure 5: Hole with Enclosed Polygon (Island)

  Rule 3:   A hole MUST be formed from a legal linear ring in
            accordance with [geoshape], except that points are
            specified in a clockwise direction.

  Holes are specified in a clockwise direction so that the upward
  normal is opposed to the upward normal of the exterior boundary of
  the polygon.  Note that [geoshape] stipulates that exterior
  boundaries are specified in counterclockwise order.





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RFC 5964                 Service Boundary Holes              August 2010


  There is no restriction on the number of points that are used to
  express the perimeter of either exterior or interior boundaries.

4.  GML Polygons

  The GML encoding of a polygon defines a enclosed exterior boundary,
  with the first and last points of boundary being the same.  Consider
  the example in Figure 6.

      F--------------E
     /                \
    /                  \
   /                    \
  A                      D
   \                    /
    \                  /
     \                /
      B--------------C

  <gml:Polygon srsName="urn:ogc:def:crs:EPSG::4326">
    <gml:exterior>
      <gml:LinearRing>
        <gml:pos>43.311 -73.422</gml:pos> <!--A-->
        <gml:pos>43.111 -73.322</gml:pos> <!--B-->
        <gml:pos>43.111 -73.222</gml:pos> <!--C-->
        <gml:pos>43.311 -73.122</gml:pos> <!--D-->
        <gml:pos>43.411 -73.222</gml:pos> <!--E-->
        <gml:pos>43.411 -73.322</gml:pos> <!--F-->
        <gml:pos>43.311 -73.422</gml:pos> <!--A-->
      </gml:LinearRing>
    </gml:exterior>
  </gml:Polygon>

                  Figure 6: Hexagon and Associated GML

  Note that polygon vertices in Figure 6 are expressed using <pos>
  elements for clarity.  The vertices can also be expressed using a
  <posList> element.

5.  Holes in GML Polygons

  A hole is specified in the polygon by defining an interior boundary.
  The points defining the internal boundary define the area represented
  by the hole in the primary (exterior) polygon.  The shaded area in
  Figure 7 is represented by the 4 points of the interior boundary
  specified by (w,z,y,x).





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      F-------------E
     /               \
    / w-------------x \
   /  |/////////////|  \
  A   |/////////////|   D
   \  |/////////////|  /
    \ z-------------y /
     \               /
      B-------------C

  <gml:Polygon srsName="urn:ogc:def:crs:EPSG::4326">
    <gml:exterior>
      <gml:LinearRing>
        <gml:pos>43.311 -73.422</gml:pos> <!--A-->
        <gml:pos>43.111 -73.322</gml:pos> <!--B-->
        <gml:pos>43.111 -73.222</gml:pos> <!--C-->
        <gml:pos>43.311 -73.122</gml:pos> <!--D-->
        <gml:pos>43.511 -73.222</gml:pos> <!--E-->
        <gml:pos>43.511 -73.322</gml:pos> <!--F-->
        <gml:pos>43.311 -73.422</gml:pos> <!--A-->
      </gml:LinearRing>
    </gml:exterior>
    <gml:interior>
      <gml:LinearRing>
        <gml:pos>43.411 -73.322</gml:pos> <!--w-->
        <gml:pos>43.411 -73.222</gml:pos> <!--x-->
        <gml:pos>43.211 -73.222</gml:pos> <!--y-->
        <gml:pos>43.211 -73.322</gml:pos> <!--z-->
        <gml:pos>43.411 -73.322</gml:pos> <!--w-->
      </gml:LinearRing>
    </gml:interior>
  </gml:Polygon>

                       Figure 7: Hexagon with Hole

6.  Service Boundary Specification and Selection Algorithm

  A service boundary is represented by a polygon that may have many
  vertices.  The enclosed area of the polygon represents the area in
  which a service, expressed as a service URN, maps to a single URI.

  Figure 7 is used to illustrate two service boundaries.  The first
  service boundary A->F shall be referred to as area-A, and the second
  service boundary w->z shall be referred to as area-w.  Furthermore,
  area-A is directly represented by the GML encoding provided in
  Figure 7.  Area-w is represented as a hole in area-A by the interior





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  boundary.  Since area-w is also a service boundary, a separate
  polygon describing this area is also required and is shown in
  Figure 8 (note the reversal of the vertices).

  <gml:Polygon srsName="urn:ogc:def:crs:EPSG::4326">
    <gml:exterior>
      <gml:LinearRing>
        <gml:pos>43.411 -73.322</gml:pos> <!--w-->
        <gml:pos>43.211 -73.322</gml:pos> <!--z-->
        <gml:pos>43.211 -73.222</gml:pos> <!--y-->
        <gml:pos>43.411 -73.222</gml:pos> <!--x-->
        <gml:pos>43.411 -73.322</gml:pos> <!--w-->
      </gml:LinearRing>
    </gml:exterior>
  </gml:Polygon>

                        Figure 8: GML for Area-w

  Service mappings for these boundaries might be provided by a LoST
  server in the form shown in Figure 9.

    <mapping xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:lost1"
             expires="2010-12-25T09:44:33Z"
             lastUpdated="2010-03-08T03:48:22Z"
             source="authoritative.foo.example"
             sourceId="7e3f40b098c711dbb606011111111111">
      <displayName xml:lang="en">Outer Area Police</displayName>
      <service>urn:service:sos.police</service>
      <serviceBoundary profile="geodetic-2d">
        <gml:Polygon xmlns:gml="http://www.opengis.net/gml"
                     srsName="urn:ogc:def:crs:EPSG::4326">
          <gml:exterior>
            <gml:LinearRing>
              <gml:pos>43.311 -73.422</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.111 -73.322</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.111 -73.222</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.311 -73.122</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.511 -73.222</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.511 -73.322</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.311 -73.422</gml:pos>
            </gml:LinearRing>
          </gml:exterior>
          <!-- this is the service boundary hole -->
          <gml:interior>
            <gml:LinearRing>
              <gml:pos>43.411 -73.322</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.211 -73.322</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.211 -73.222</gml:pos>



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              <gml:pos>43.411 -73.222</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.411 -73.322</gml:pos>
            </gml:LinearRing>
          </gml:interior>
        </gml:Polygon>
      </serviceBoundary>
      <uri>sip:[email protected]</uri>
      <uri>xmpp:[email protected]</uri>
      <serviceNumber>000</serviceNumber>
    </mapping>

    <mapping xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:lost1"
             expires="2010-12-25T09:44:33Z"
             lastUpdated="2010-03-08T03:48:22Z"
             source="authoritative.foo.example"
             sourceId="7e3f40b098c711dbb606011111111111">
      <displayName xml:lang="en">Inner Area Police</displayName>
      <service>urn:service:sos.police</service>
      <serviceBoundary profile="geodetic-2d">
        <gml:Polygon xmlns:gml="http://www.opengis.net/gml"
                     srsName="urn:ogc:def:crs:EPSG::4326">
          <gml:exterior>
            <gml:LinearRing>
              <gml:pos>43.411 -73.322</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.211 -73.322</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.211 -73.222</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.411 -73.222</gml:pos>
              <gml:pos>43.411 -73.322</gml:pos>
            </gml:LinearRing>
          </gml:exterior>
        </gml:Polygon>
      </serviceBoundary>
      <uri>sip:[email protected]</uri>
      <uri>xmpp:[email protected]</uri>
      <serviceNumber>000</serviceNumber>
    </mapping>

                Figure 9: Service Boundary Specifications

  It is considered likely that LoST servers will need to provide
  responses sufficiently quickly to allow real-time queries to be
  performed as part of an emergency call routing flow.  It is for this
  reason that databases supporting native geospatial query techniques
  are desirable and that service boundary specifications that are
  easily mapped to internal data structures are preferred.  Using
  interior boundaries makes support for this operation easy, while
  allowing an arbitrary number of holes in a service boundary to be
  specified.



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  Each polygon is stored in the geospatial database and mapped to a
  service URN and destination URI.  Many geospatial databases natively
  support polygons with interior exclusions.  Without native support,
  interior boundaries can be stored against the polygon and can checked
  separately.  A location falls within the area described by a polygon
  if it is within the exterior boundary and not within any interior
  boundary.

  In the above example, if a location falls within the interior
  boundary, it maps to the "Inner Area Police" service; likewise, if a
  location falls within the exterior boundary, but not within the
  interior boundary, it maps to the "Outer Area Police" service.

7.  Security Considerations

  Constraining the form of a polygon representation as described in
  this document does not introduce new security considerations.

8.  Acknowledgements

  Thanks to Carl Reed for input provided to the list some months back
  and for reviewing this document.  Thanks to Michael Haberler for
  suggesting that such a specification is required.  Thanks to Avery
  Penniston for review and feedback.

9.  References

9.1.  Normative References

  [RFC2119]    Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
               Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [RFC5222]    Hardie, T., Newton, A., Schulzrinne, H., and H.
               Tschofenig, "LoST: A Location-to-Service Translation
               Protocol", RFC 5222, August 2008.

  [geoshape]   Thomson, M. and C. Reed, "GML 3.1.1 PIDF-LO Shape
               Application Schema for use by the Internet Engineering
               Task Force (IETF)", Candidate OpenGIS Implementation
               Specification 06-142r1, Version: 1.0, April 2007.

9.2.  Informative References

  [ISO-19107]  ISO, "Geographic information - Spatial Schema", ISO
               Standard 19107, First Edition, May 2003.






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Authors' Addresses

  James Winterbottom
  Andrew Corporation
  Andrew Building (39)
  Wollongong University Campus
  Northfields Avenue
  Wollongong, NSW  2522
  AU

  EMail: [email protected]


  Martin Thomson
  Andrew Corporation
  Andrew Building (39)
  Wollongong University Campus
  Northfields Avenue
  Wollongong, NSW  2522
  AU

  EMail: [email protected]





























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