Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                        J. Seedorf
Request for Comments: 9241                                 HFT Stuttgart
Category: Standards Track                                        Y. Yang
ISSN: 2070-1721                                          Yale University
                                                                  K. Ma
                                                               Ericsson
                                                            J. Peterson
                                                                NeuStar
                                                               J. Zhang
                                                      Tongji University
                                                              July 2022


    Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI) Footprint and
Capabilities Advertisement Using Application-Layer Traffic Optimization
                                (ALTO)

Abstract

  The Content Delivery Networks Interconnection (CDNI) framework in RFC
  6707 defines a set of protocols to interconnect CDNs to achieve
  multiple goals, including extending the reach of a given CDN.  A CDNI
  Request Routing Footprint & Capabilities Advertisement interface
  (FCI) is needed to achieve the goals of a CDNI.  RFC 8008 defines the
  FCI semantics and provides guidelines on the FCI protocol, but the
  exact protocol is not specified.  This document defines a new
  Application-Layer Traffic Optimization (ALTO) service, called "CDNI
  Advertisement Service", that provides an implementation of the FCI,
  following the guidelines defined in RFC 8008.

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 7841.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9241.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2022 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
  (https://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 Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the
  Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described
  in the Revised BSD License.

Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction
  2.  Terminology and Background
    2.1.  Terminology
    2.2.  Semantics of FCI Advertisement
    2.3.  ALTO Background and Benefits
  3.  CDNI Advertisement Service
    3.1.  Media Type
    3.2.  HTTP Method
    3.3.  Accept Input Parameters
    3.4.  Capabilities
    3.5.  Uses
    3.6.  Response
    3.7.  Examples
      3.7.1.  IRD
      3.7.2.  A Basic Example
      3.7.3.  Incremental Updates
  4.  CDNI Advertisement Service Using ALTO Network Map
    4.1.  Network Map Footprint Type: altopid
    4.2.  Examples
      4.2.1.  ALTO Network Map for CDNI Advertisements
      4.2.2.  ALTO PID Footprints in CDNI Advertisements
      4.2.3.  Incremental Updates
  5.  Filtered CDNI Advertisement Using CDNI Capabilities
    5.1.  Media Type
    5.2.  HTTP Method
    5.3.  Accept Input Parameters
    5.4.  Capabilities
    5.5.  Uses
    5.6.  Response
    5.7.  Examples
      5.7.1.  A Basic Example
      5.7.2.  Incremental Updates
  6.  Query Footprint Properties Using ALTO Property Map Service
    6.1.  Representing Footprint Objects as Property Map Entities
      6.1.1.  ASN Domain
      6.1.2.  COUNTRYCODE Domain
    6.2.  Representing CDNI Capabilities as Property Map Entity
          Properties
      6.2.1.  Defining Information Resource Media Type for Property
              Type cdni-capabilities
      6.2.2.  Intended Semantics of Property Type cdni-capabilities
    6.3.  Examples
      6.3.1.  Property Map
      6.3.2.  Filtered Property Map
      6.3.3.  Incremental Updates
  7.  IANA Considerations
    7.1.  application/alto-cdni+json Media Type
    7.2.  application/alto-cdnifilter+json Media Type
    7.3.  CDNI Metadata Footprint Types Registry
    7.4.  ALTO Entity Domain Types Registry
    7.5.  ALTO Entity Property Types Registry
  8.  Security Considerations
  9.  References
    9.1.  Normative References
    9.2.  Informative References
  Acknowledgments
  Contributors
  Authors' Addresses

1.  Introduction

  The ability to interconnect multiple content delivery networks (CDNs)
  has many benefits, including increased coverage, capability, and
  reliability.  The Content Delivery Networks Interconnection (CDNI)
  framework [RFC6707] defines four interfaces to interconnect CDNs: (1)
  the CDNI Request Routing Interface, (2) the CDNI Metadata Interface,
  (3) the CDNI Logging Interface, and (4) the CDNI Control Interface.

  Among these four interfaces, the CDNI Request Routing Interface
  provides key functions, as specified in [RFC6707]:

  |  The CDNI Request Routing interface enables a Request Routing
  |  function in an Upstream CDN to query a Request Routing function in
  |  a Downstream CDN to determine if the Downstream CDN is able (and
  |  willing) to accept the delegated Content Request.  It also allows
  |  the Downstream CDN to control what should be returned to the User
  |  Agent in the redirection message by the upstream Request Routing
  |  function.

  At a high level, therefore, the scope of the CDNI Request Routing
  Interface contains two main tasks: (1) determining if the dCDN
  (downstream CDN) is willing to accept a delegated Content Request and
  (2) redirecting the Content Request coming from a uCDN (upstream CDN)
  to the proper entry point or entity in the dCDN.

  Correspondingly, the Request Routing Interface is broadly divided
  into two functionalities: (1) the CDNI Footprint & Capabilities
  Advertisement interface (FCI) defined in [RFC8008] and (2) the CDNI
  Request Routing Redirection interface (RI) defined in [RFC7975].
  This document focuses on the first functionality (CDNI FCI).

  Specifically, CDNI FCI allows both an Advertisement from a dCDN to a
  uCDN (push) and a query from a uCDN to a dCDN (pull) so that the uCDN
  knows whether it can redirect a particular user request to that dCDN.

  A key component in defining the CDNI FCI is defining the objects that
  describe the footprints and capabilities of a dCDN.  Such objects are
  already specified in Section 5 of [RFC8008].  However, no protocol is
  defined to transport and update such objects between a uCDN and a
  dCDN.

  To define such a protocol, this document specifies an extension of
  the Application-Layer Traffic Optimization (ALTO) Protocol [RFC7285]
  by introducing a new ALTO service called "CDNI Advertisement
  Service".

  Section 2.3 discusses the benefits in using ALTO as a transport
  protocol.

2.  Terminology and Background

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
  "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
  BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
  capitals, as shown here.

  The design of CDNI FCI transport using ALTO assumes an understanding
  of both FCI semantics and ALTO.  Hence, this document starts with a
  non-normative review of both.

2.1.  Terminology

  The document uses the CDNI terms defined in [RFC6707], [RFC8006], and
  [RFC8008].  Also, the document uses the ALTO terms defined in
  [RFC7285] and [RFC9240].  This document uses the following
  abbreviations:

  ALTO:   Application-Layer Traffic Optimization

  ASN:    Autonomous System Number

  CDN:    Content Delivery Network

  CDNI:   CDN Interconnection

  dCDN:   Downstream CDN

  FCI:    CDNI FCI, CDNI Request Routing Footprint & Capabilities
          Advertisement interface

  IRD:    Information Resource Directory in ALTO

  PID:    Provider-defined Identifier in ALTO

  uCDN:   Upstream CDN

2.2.  Semantics of FCI Advertisement

  [RFC8008] defines the semantics of CDNI FCI, provides guidance on
  what footprint and capabilities mean in a CDNI context, and specifies
  the requirements on the CDNI FCI transport protocol.  The definitions
  in [RFC8008] depend on [RFC8006].  Below is a non-normative review of
  key related points of [RFC8008] and [RFC8006].  For detailed
  information and normative specification, the reader should refer to
  these two RFCs.

  *  Multiple types of mandatory-to-implement footprints (i.e.,
     "ipv4cidr", "ipv6cidr", "asn", and "countrycode") are defined in
     [RFC8006].  A "set of IP prefixes" can contain both full IP
     addresses (i.e., a /32 for IPv4 or a /128 for IPv6) and IP
     prefixes with an arbitrary prefix length.  There must also be
     support for multiple IP address versions, i.e., IPv4 and IPv6, in
     such a footprint.

  *  Multiple initial types of capabilities are defined in [RFC8008]
     including (1) Delivery Protocol, (2) Acquisition Protocol, (3)
     Redirection Mode, (4) capabilities related to CDNI Logging, and
     (5) capabilities related to CDNI Metadata.  They are required in
     all cases and, therefore, considered as mandatory-to-implement
     capabilities for all CDNI FCI implementations.

  *  Footprint and capabilities are defined together and cannot be
     interpreted independently from each other.  Specifically,
     [RFC8008] integrates footprint and capabilities with an approach
     of "capabilities with footprint restrictions", by expressing
     capabilities on a per footprint basis.

  *  Specifically, for all mandatory-to-implement footprint types,
     footprints can be viewed as constraints for delegating requests to
     a dCDN: a dCDN footprint advertisement tells the uCDN the
     limitations for delegating a request to the dCDN.  For IP prefixes
     or Autonomous System Numbers (ASNs), the footprint signals to the
     uCDN that it should consider the dCDN a candidate only if the IP
     address of the Request Routing source falls within the prefix set
     or ASN, respectively.  The CDNI specifications do not define how a
     given uCDN determines what address ranges are in a particular ASN.
     Similarly, for country codes, a uCDN should only consider the dCDN
     a candidate if it covers the country of the Request Routing
     source.  The CDNI specifications do not define how a given uCDN
     determines the country of the Request Routing source.  Different
     types of footprint constraints can be combined together to narrow
     the dCDN candidacy, i.e., the uCDN should consider the dCDN a
     candidate only if the request routing source satisfies all the
     types of footprint constraints in the advertisement.

  *  Given that a large part of Footprint and Capabilities
     Advertisement may happen in contractual agreements, the semantics
     of CDNI Footprint and Capabilities Advertisement refers to
     answering the following question: what exactly still needs to be
     advertised by the CDNI FCI?  For instance, updates about temporal
     failures of part of a footprint can be useful information to
     convey via the CDNI FCI.  Such information would provide updates
     on information previously agreed to in contracts between the
     participating CDNs.  In other words, the CDNI FCI is a means for a
     dCDN to provide changes and updates regarding a footprint and/or
     capabilities that it has previously agreed to serve in a contract
     with a uCDN.  Hence, server push and incremental encoding will be
     necessary techniques.

2.3.  ALTO Background and Benefits

  Application-Layer Traffic Optimization (ALTO) [RFC7285] defines an
  approach for conveying network-layer (topology) information to
  "guide" the resource provider selection process in distributed
  applications that can choose among several candidate resources
  providers to retrieve a given resource.  Usually, it is assumed that
  an ALTO server conveys information that these applications cannot
  measure or have difficulty measuring themselves [RFC5693].

  Originally, ALTO was motivated by optimizing cross-ISP traffic
  generated by peer-to-peer applications [RFC5693].  However, ALTO can
  also be used for improving the Request Routing in CDNs.  In
  particular, Section 5 of [RFC7971] explicitly mentions ALTO as a
  candidate protocol to improve the selection of a CDN surrogate or
  origin.

  The following reasons make ALTO a suitable candidate protocol for
  dCDN selection as part of CDNI Request Routing and, in particular,
  for an FCI protocol:

  *  Application-Layer-oriented: ALTO is a protocol specifically
     designed to improve application-layer traffic (and application-
     layer connections among hosts on the Internet) by providing
     additional information to applications that these applications
     could not easily retrieve themselves.  This matches the need of
     CDNI, where a uCDN wants to improve application-layer CDN request
     routing by using information (provided by a dCDN) that the uCDN
     could not easily obtain otherwise.  Hence, ALTO can help a uCDN to
     select a proper dCDN by first providing dCDNs' capabilities as
     well as footprints (see Section 3) and then providing costs of
     surrogates in a dCDN by ALTO cost maps.

  *  Security: The identification between uCDNs and dCDNs is an
     important requirement (see Section 8).  ALTO maps can be signed
     and hence provide inherent origin protection.  Please see
     Section 15.1.2 of [RFC7285] for detailed protection strategies.

  *  RESTful design: The ALTO Protocol has undergone extensive
     revisions in order to provide a RESTful design regarding the
     client-server interaction specified by the protocol.  It is
     flexible and extensible enough to handle existing and potential
     future data formats defined by CDNI.  It can provide the
     consistent client-server interaction model for other existing CDNI
     interfaces or potential future extensions and therefore reduce the
     learning cost for both users and developers, although they are not
     in the scope of this document.  A CDNI FCI interface based on ALTO
     would inherit this RESTful design.  Please see Section 3.

  *  Error handling: The ALTO Protocol provides extensive error
     handling in the whole request and response process (see
     Section 8.5 of [RFC7285]).  A CDNI FCI interface based on ALTO
     would inherit this extensive error-handling framework.  Please see
     Section 5.

  *  Map Service: The semantics of an ALTO network map is an exact
     match for the needed information to convey a footprint by a dCDN,
     in particular, if such a footprint is being expressed by IP prefix
     ranges.  Please see Section 4.

  *  Filtered Map Service: The ALTO map filtering service would allow a
     uCDN to query only for parts of an ALTO map.  For example, the
     ALTO filtered property Map Service can enable a uCDN to query
     properties of a part of footprints efficiently.  Please see
     Section 6.

  *  Server-initiated notifications and incremental updates: When the
     footprint or the capabilities of a dCDN change (i.e., unexpectedly
     from the perspective of a uCDN), server-initiated notifications
     would enable a dCDN to inform a uCDN about such changes directly.
     Consider the case where -- due to failure -- part of the footprint
     of the dCDN is not functioning, i.e., the CDN cannot serve content
     to such clients with reasonable QoS.  Without server-initiated
     notifications, the uCDN might still use a recent network and cost
     map from the dCDN and therefore redirect requests to the dCDN that
     it cannot serve.  Similarly, the possibility for incremental
     updates would enable efficient conveyance of the aforementioned
     (or similar) status changes by the dCDN to the uCDN.  The newest
     design of ALTO supports server-pushed incremental updates
     [RFC8895].

  *  Content availability on hosts: A dCDN might want to express CDN
     capabilities in terms of certain content types (e.g., codecs and/
     or formats, or content from certain content providers).  ALTO
     Entity Property Map [RFC9240] would enable a dCDN to make such
     information available to a uCDN.  This would enable a uCDN to
     assess whether a dCDN has the capabilities for a given type of
     content requested.

  *  Resource availability on hosts or links: The capabilities on links
     (e.g., maximum bandwidth) or caches (e.g., average load) might be
     useful information for a uCDN for optimized dCDN selection.  For
     instance, if a uCDN receives a streaming request for content with
     a certain bitrate, it needs to know if it is likely that a dCDN
     can fulfill such stringent application-level requirements (i.e.,
     can be expected to have enough consistent bandwidth) before it
     redirects the request.  In general, if ALTO could convey such
     information via ALTO Entity Property Map [RFC9240], it would
     enable more sophisticated means for dCDN selection with ALTO.  The
     ALTO Path Vector extension [ALTO-PATH-VECTOR] is designed to allow
     ALTO clients to query information such as capacity regions for a
     given set of flows.

3.  CDNI Advertisement Service

  The ALTO Protocol relies upon the ALTO information service framework,
  which consists of multiple services.  All ALTO services are "provided
  through a common transport protocol; messaging structure and
  encoding; and transaction model" [RFC7285].  The ALTO Protocol
  specification defines multiple initial services, e.g., the ALTO
  Network Map Service and Cost Map Service.

  This document defines a new ALTO service, called "CDNI Advertisement
  Service", which conveys JSON [RFC8259] objects of media type
  "application/alto-cdni+json".  These JSON objects are used to
  transport BaseAdvertisementObject objects defined in [RFC8008].  This
  document specifies how to transport such BaseAdvertisementObject
  objects via the ALTO Protocol with the ALTO CDNI Advertisement
  Service.  Similar to other ALTO services, this document defines the
  ALTO information resource for the CDNI Advertisement Service as
  follows.

  Note that the encoding of BaseAdvertisementObject reuses the one
  defined in [RFC8008] and therefore also follows the recommendations
  of I-JSON (Internet JSON) [RFC7493], which is required by [RFC8008].

3.1.  Media Type

  The media type of the CDNI Advertisement resource is "application/
  alto-cdni+json" (see Section 7).

3.2.  HTTP Method

  A CDNI Advertisement resource is requested using the HTTP GET method.

3.3.  Accept Input Parameters

  There are no applicable Accept Input parameters.

3.4.  Capabilities

  There are no applicable capabilities.

3.5.  Uses

  The "uses" field MUST NOT appear unless the CDNI Advertisement
  resource depends on other ALTO information resources.  If the CDNI
  Advertisement resource has dependent resources, the resource IDs of
  its dependent resources MUST be included into the "uses" field.  This
  document only defines one potential dependent resource for the CDNI
  Advertisement resource.  See Section 4 for details of when and how to
  use it.  Future documents may extend the CDNI Advertisement resource
  and allow other dependent resources.

3.6.  Response

  The "meta" field of a CDNI Advertisement response MUST include the
  "vtag" field defined in Section 10.3 of [RFC7285].  This field
  provides the version of the retrieved CDNI FCI resource.

  If a CDNI Advertisement response depends on other ALTO information
  resources, it MUST include the "dependent-vtags" field, whose value
  is an array to indicate the version tags of the resources used, where
  each resource is specified in "uses" of its Information Resource
  Directory (IRD) entry.

  The data component of an ALTO CDNI Advertisement response is named
  "cdni-advertisement", which is a JSON object of type
  CDNIAdvertisementData:

      object {
        CDNIAdvertisementData cdni-advertisement;
      } InfoResourceCDNIAdvertisement : ResponseEntityBase;

      object {
        BaseAdvertisementObject capabilities-with-footprints<0..*>;
      } CDNIAdvertisementData;

  Specifically, a CDNIAdvertisementData object is a JSON object that
  includes only one property named "capabilities-with-footprints",
  whose value is an array of BaseAdvertisementObject objects.  It
  provides capabilities with footprint restrictions for the uCDN to
  decide the dCDN selection.  If the value of this property is an empty
  array, it means the corresponding dCDN cannot provide any mandatory-
  to-implement CDNI capabilities for any footprints.

  The syntax and semantics of BaseAdvertisementObject are well defined
  in Section 5.1 of [RFC8008].  A BaseAdvertisementObject object
  includes multiple properties, including "capability-type",
  "capability-value", and "footprints", where "footprints" are defined
  in Section 4.2.2.2 of [RFC8006].

  An equivalent specification in the ALTO-style notation (see
  Section 8.2 of [RFC7285]) creates a self-contained description of the
  BaseAdvertisementObject.  As mentioned above, the normative
  specification of BaseAdvertisementObject is in [RFC8008].

      object {
        JSONString capability-type;
        JSONValue capability-value;
        Footprint footprints<0..*>;
      } BaseAdvertisementObject;

      object {
        JSONString footprint-type;
        JSONString footprint-value<1..*>;
      } Footprint;

  For each BaseAdvertisementObject, the ALTO client MUST interpret
  "footprints" appearing multiple times as if they appeared only once.
  If "footprints" in a BaseAdvertisementObject is null or empty or does
  not appear, the ALTO client MUST understand that the capabilities in
  this BaseAdvertisementObject have the "global" coverage, i.e., the
  corresponding dCDN can provide them for any Request Routing source.

  Note: Further optimization of BaseAdvertisementObjects to effectively
  provide the advertisement of capabilities with footprint restrictions
  is certainly possible.  For example, these two examples below both
  describe that the dCDN can provide capabilities ["http/1.1",
  "https/1.1"] for the same footprints.  However, the latter one is
  smaller in its size.

  EXAMPLE 1
      {
        "meta": {...},
        "cdni-advertisement": {
          "capabilities-with-footprints": [
            {
              "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
              "capability-value": {
                "delivery-protocols": [
                  "http/1.1"
                ]
              },
              "footprints": [
                <Footprint objects>
              ]
            },
            {

              "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
              "capability-value": {
                "delivery-protocols": [
                  "https/1.1"
                ]
              },
              "footprints": [
                <Footprint objects>
              ]
            }
          ]
        }
      }

  EXAMPLE 2
      {
        "meta": {...},
        "cdni-advertisement": {
          "capabilities-with-footprints": [
            {
              "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
              "capability-value": {
                "delivery-protocols": [
                  "https/1.1",
                  "http/1.1"
                ]
              },
              "footprints": [
                <Footprint objects>
              ]
            }
          ]
        }
      }

  Since such optimizations are not required for the basic
  interconnection of CDNs, the specifics of such mechanisms are outside
  the scope of this document.

  This document only requires the ALTO server to provide the initial
  FCI-specific CDNI Payload Types defined in [RFC8008] as the
  mandatory-to-implement CDNI capabilities.

3.7.  Examples

3.7.1.  IRD

  Below is the IRD of a simple, example ALTO server.  The server
  provides both base ALTO information resources (e.g., network maps)
  and CDNI FCI-related information resources (e.g., CDNI Advertisement
  resources), demonstrating a single, integrated environment.

  Specifically, the IRD announces nine information resources as
  follows:

  *  two network maps,

  *  one CDNI Advertisement resource without dependency,

  *  one CDNI Advertisement resource depending on a network map,

  *  one filtered CDNI Advertisement resource to be defined in
     Section 5,

  *  one property map including "cdni-capabilities" as its entity
     property,

  *  one filtered property map including "cdni-capabilities" and "pid"
     as its entity properties, and

  *  two update stream services:

     -  one for updating CDNI Advertisement resources,

     -  one for updating property maps

   GET /directory HTTP/1.1
   Host: alto.example.com
   Accept: application/alto-directory+json,application/alto-error+json

   HTTP/1.1 200 OK
   Content-Length: 3531
   Content-Type: application/alto-directory+json

   {
     "meta": {
       "default-alto-network-map": "my-default-network-map"
     },
     "resources": {
       "my-default-network-map": {
         "uri": "https://alto.example.com/networkmap",
         "media-type": "application/alto-networkmap+json"
       },
       "my-eu-netmap": {
         "uri": "https://alto.example.com/myeunetmap",
         "media-type": "application/alto-networkmap+json"
       },
       "my-default-cdnifci": {
         "uri": "https://alto.example.com/cdnifci",
         "media-type": "application/alto-cdni+json"
       },
       "my-cdnifci-with-pid-footprints": {
         "uri": "https://alto.example.com/networkcdnifci",
         "media-type": "application/alto-cdni+json",
         "uses": [ "my-eu-netmap" ]
       },
       "my-filtered-cdnifci": {
         "uri": "https://alto.example.com/cdnifci/filtered",
         "media-type": "application/alto-cdni+json",
         "accepts": "application/alto-cdnifilter+json"
       },
       "cdnifci-property-map": {
         "uri": "https://alto.example.com/propmap/full/cdnifci",
         "media-type": "application/alto-propmap+json",
         "uses": [ "my-default-cdni" ],
         "capabilities": {
           "mappings": {
             "ipv4": [ "my-default-cdni.cdni-capabilities" ],
             "ipv6": [ "my-default-cdni.cdni-capabilities" ],
             "countrycode": [
               "my-default-cdni.cdni-capabilities" ],
             "asn": [ "my-default-cdni.cdni-capabilities" ]
           }
         }
       },
       "filtered-cdnifci-property-map": {
         "uri": "https://alto.example.com/propmap/lookup/cdnifci-pid",
         "media-type": "application/alto-propmap+json",
         "accepts": "application/alto-propmapparams+json",
         "uses": [ "my-default-cdni", "my-default-network-map" ],
         "capabilities": {
           "mappings": {
             "ipv4": [ "my-default-cdni.cdni-capabilities",
                       "my-default-network-map.pid" ],
             "ipv6": [ "my-default-cdni.cdni-capabilities",
                       "my-default-network-map.pid" ],
             "countrycode": [
               "my-default-cdni.cdni-capabilities" ],
             "asn": [ "my-default-cdni.cdni-capabilities" ]
           }
         }
       },
       "update-my-cdni-fci": {
         "uri": "https://alto.example.com/updates/cdnifci",
         "media-type": "text/event-stream",
         "accepts": "application/alto-updatestreamparams+json",
         "uses": [
           "my-default-network-map",
           "my-eu-netmap",
           "my-default-cdnifci",
           "my-filtered-cdnifci",
           "my-cdnifci-with-pid-footprints"
         ],
         "capabilities": {
           "incremental-change-media-types": {
            "my-default-network-map": "application/json-patch+json",
            "my-eu-netmap": "application/json-patch+json",
            "my-default-cdnifci":
            "application/merge-patch+json,application/json-patch+json",
            "my-filtered-cdnifci":
            "application/merge-patch+json,application/json-patch+json",
            "my-cdnifci-with-pid-footprints":
            "application/merge-patch+json,application/json-patch+json"
           }
         }
       },
       "update-my-props": {
         "uri": "https://alto.example.com/updates/properties",
         "media-type": "text/event-stream",
         "uses": [
           "cdnifci-property-map",
           "filtered-cdnifci-property-map"
         ],
         "capabilities": {
           "incremental-change-media-types": {
            "cdnifci-property-map":
            "application/merge-patch+json,application/json-patch+json",
            "filtered-cdnifci-property-map":
            "application/merge-patch+json,application/json-patch+json"
           }
         }
       }
     }
   }

3.7.2.  A Basic Example

  This basic example demonstrates a simple CDNI Advertisement resource,
  which does not depend on other resources.  There are three
  BaseAdvertisementObjects in this resource and these objects'
  capabilities are "http/1.1" delivery protocol, ["http/1.1",
  "https/1.1"] delivery protocol, and "https/1.1" acquisition protocol,
  respectively.

    GET /cdnifci HTTP/1.1
    Host: alto.example.com
    Accept: application/alto-cdni+json,application/alto-error+json

    HTTP/1.1 200 OK
    Content-Length: 1411
    Content-Type: application/alto-cdni+json

    {
      "meta": {
        "vtag": {
          "resource-id": "my-default-cdnifci",
          "tag": "da65eca2eb7a10ce8b059740b0b2e3f8eb1d4785"
        }
      },
      "cdni-advertisement": {
        "capabilities-with-footprints": [
          {
            "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
            "capability-value": {
              "delivery-protocols": [
                "http/1.1"
              ]
            },
            "footprints": [
              {
                "footprint-type": "ipv4cidr",
                "footprint-value": [ "192.0.2.0/24" ]
              },
              {
                "footprint-type": "ipv6cidr",
                "footprint-value": [ "2001:db8::/32" ]
              }
            ]
          },
          {
            "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
            "capability-value": {
              "delivery-protocols": [
                "https/1.1",
                "http/1.1"
              ]
            },
            "footprints": [
              {
                "footprint-type": "ipv4cidr",
                "footprint-value": [ "198.51.100.0/24" ]
              }
            ]
          },
          {
            "capability-type": "FCI.AcquisitionProtocol",
            "capability-value": {
              "acquisition-protocols": [
                "https/1.1"
              ]
            },
            "footprints": [
              {
                "footprint-type": "ipv4cidr",
                "footprint-value": [ "203.0.113.0/24" ]
              }
            ]
          }
        ]
      }
    }

3.7.3.  Incremental Updates

  A benefit of using ALTO to provide CDNI Advertisement resources is
  that such resources can be updated using ALTO incremental updates
  [RFC8895].  Below is an example that also shows the benefit of having
  both JSON merge patch and JSON patch to encode updates.

  At first, an ALTO client requests updates for "my-default-cdnifci",
  and the ALTO server returns the "control-uri" followed by the full
  CDNI Advertisement response.  Then when there is a change in the
  "delivery-protocols" in that "http/1.1" is removed (from ["http/1.1",
  "https/1.1"] to only "https/1.1") due to maintenance of the
  "http/1.1" clusters, the ALTO server regenerates the new CDNI
  Advertisement resource and pushes the full replacement to the ALTO
  client.  Later on, the ALTO server notifies the ALTO client that
  "192.0.2.0/24" is added into the "ipv4" footprint object for delivery
  protocol "https/1.1" by sending the change encoded by JSON patch to
  the ALTO client.

   POST /updates/cdnifci HTTP/1.1
   Host: alto.example.com
   Accept: text/event-stream,application/alto-error+json
   Content-Type: application/alto-updatestreamparams+json
   Content-Length: 94

   {
     "add": {
       "my-cdnifci-stream": {
         "resource-id": "my-default-cdnifci"
       }
     }
   }

   HTTP/1.1 200 OK
   Connection: keep-alive
   Content-Type: text/event-stream

   event: application/alto-updatestreamcontrol+json
   data: {"control-uri":
   data: "https://alto.example.com/updates/streams/3141592653589"}

   event: application/alto-cdni+json,my-cdnifci-stream
   data: { ... full CDNI Advertisement resource ... }

   event: application/alto-cdni+json,my-cdnifci-stream
   data: {
   data:   "meta": {
   data:     "vtag": {
   data:       "tag": "dasdfa10ce8b059740bddsfasd8eb1d47853716"
   data:     }
   data:   },
   data:   "cdni-advertisement": {
   data:     "capabilities-with-footprints": [
   data:       {
   data:         "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
   data:         "capability-value": {
   data:           "delivery-protocols": [
   data:             "https/1.1"
   data:           ]
   data:         },
   data:         "footprints": [
   data:           { "footprint-type": "ipv4cidr",
   data:             "footprint-value": [ "203.0.113.0/24" ]
   data:           }
   data:         ]
   data:       },
   data:       { ... other CDNI advertisement object ... }
   data:     ]
   data:   }
   data: }

   event: application/json-patch+json,my-cdnifci-stream
   data: [
   data:   { "op": "replace",
   data:     "path": "/meta/vtag/tag",
   data:     "value": "a10ce8b059740b0b2e3f8eb1d4785acd42231bfe"
   data:   },
   data:   { "op": "add",
   data:     "path": "/cdni-advertisement/capabilities-with-footprints
   /0/footprints/0/footprint-value/-",
   data:     "value": "192.0.2.0/24"
   data:   }
   data: ]

4.  CDNI Advertisement Service Using ALTO Network Map

4.1.  Network Map Footprint Type: altopid

  The ALTO Protocol defines a concept called Provider-defined
  Identifier (PID) to represent a group of IPv4 or IPv6 addresses to
  which can be applied the same management policy.  The PID is an
  alternative to the predefined CDNI footprint types (i.e., "ipv4cidr",
  "ipv6cidr", "asn", and "countrycode").

  To leverage this concept, this document defines a new CDNI Footprint
  Type called "altopid".  A CDNI Advertisement resource can depend on
  an ALTO network map resource and use "altopid" footprints to compress
  its CDNI Footprint Payload.

  Specifically, the "altopid" footprint type indicates that the
  corresponding footprint value is a list of PIDNames as defined in
  [RFC7285].  These PIDNames are references of PIDs in a network map
  resource.  Hence a CDNI Advertisement resource using "altopid"
  footprints depends on a network map.  For such a CDNI Advertisement
  resource, the resource ID of its dependent network map MUST be
  included in the "uses" field of its IRD entry, and the "dependent-
  vtags" field with a reference to this network map MUST be included in
  its response (see the example in Section 4.2.2).

4.2.  Examples

  The following examples use the same IRD given in Section 3.7.1.

4.2.1.  ALTO Network Map for CDNI Advertisements

  Below provides a sample network map whose resource ID is "my-eu-
  netmap".  This map is referenced by the CDNI Advertisement example in
  Section 4.2.2.

   GET /myeunetmap HTTP/1.1
   Host: alto.example.com
   Accept: application/alto-networkmap+json,application/alto-error+json

   HTTP/1.1 200 OK
   Content-Length: 344
   Content-Type: application/alto-networkmap+json

   {
     "meta": {
       "vtag": [
         { "resource-id": "my-eu-netmap",
           "tag": "3ee2cb7e8d63d9fab71b9b34cbf764436315542e"
         }
       ]
     },
     "network-map": {
       "south-france" : {
         "ipv4": [ "192.0.2.0/24", "198.51.100.0/25" ],
         "ipv6": [ "2001:db8::/32" ]
       },
       "germany": {
         "ipv4": [ "203.0.113.0/24" ]
       }
     }
   }

4.2.2.  ALTO PID Footprints in CDNI Advertisements

  This example shows a CDNI Advertisement resource that depends on a
  network map described in Section 4.2.1.

   GET /networkcdnifci HTTP/1.1
   Host: alto.example.com
   Accept: application/alto-cdni+json,application/alto-error+json

   HTTP/1.1 200 OK
   Content-Length: 736
   Content-Type: application/alto-cdni+json

   {
     "meta": {
       "dependent-vtags": [
         {
           "resource-id": "my-eu-netmap",
           "tag": "3ee2cb7e8d63d9fab71b9b34cbf764436315542e"
         }
       ]
     },
     "cdni-advertisement": {
       "capabilities-with-footprints": [
         { "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
           "capability-value": [ "https/1.1" ],
           "footprints": [
             { "footprint-type": "altopid",
               "footprint-value": [ "south-france" ]
             }
           ]
         },
         { "capability-type": "FCI.AcquisitionProtocol",
           "capability-value": [ "https/1.1" ],
           "footprints": [
             { "footprint-type": "altopid",
               "footprint-value": [ "germany", "south-france" ]
             }
           ]
         }
       ]
     }
   }

4.2.3.  Incremental Updates

  In this example, the ALTO client is interested in changes of "my-
  cdnifci-with-pid-footprints" and its dependent network map "my-eu-
  netmap".  Considering two changes, the first one is to change
  footprints of the "https/1.1" delivery protocol capability, and the
  second one is to remove the "south-france" PID from the footprints of
  the "https/1.1" acquisition protocol capability.

    POST /updates/cdnifci HTTP/1.1
    Host: alto.example.com
    Accept: text/event-stream,application/alto-error+json
    Content-Type: application/alto-updatestreamparams+json
    Content-Length: 185

    {
      "add": {
        "my-eu-netmap-stream": {
          "resource-id": "my-eu-netmap"
        },
        "my-netmap-cdnifci-stream": {
          "resource-id": "my-cdnifci-with-pid-footprints"
        }
      }
    }

    HTTP/1.1 200 OK
    Connection: keep-alive
    Content-Type: text/event-stream

    event: application/alto-updatestreamcontrol+json
    data: {"control-uri":
    data: "https://alto.example.com/updates/streams/3141592653590"}

    event: application/alto-networkmap+json,my-eu-netmap-stream
    data: { ... full Network Map of my-eu-netmap ... }

    event: application/alto-cdnifci+json,my-netmap-cdnifci-stream
    data: { ... full CDNI Advertisement resource ... }

    event: application/json-patch+json,my-netmap-cdnifci-stream
    data: [
    data:   { "op": "replace",
    data:     "path": "/meta/vtag/tag",
    data:     "value": "dasdfa10ce8b059740bddsfasd8eb1d47853716"
    data:   },
    data:   { "op": "add",
    data:     "path":
    data:     "/cdni-advertisement/capabilities-with-footprints
    /0/footprints/0/footprint-value/-",
    data:     "value": "germany"
    data:   }
    data: ]

    event: application/json-patch+json,my-netmap-cdnifci-stream
    data: [
    data:   { "op": "replace",
    data:     "path": "/meta/vtag/tag",
    data:     "value": "a10ce8b059740b0b2e3f8eb1d4785acd42231bfe"
    data:   },
    data:   { "op": "remove",
    data:     "path":
    data:     "/cdni-advertisement/capabilities-with-footprints
    /1/footprints/0/footprint-value/1"
    data:   }
    data: ]

5.  Filtered CDNI Advertisement Using CDNI Capabilities

  Sections 3 and 4 describe the CDNI Advertisement Service that can be
  used to enable a uCDN to get capabilities with footprint restrictions
  from dCDNs.  However, since always getting full CDNI Advertisement
  resources from dCDNs is inefficient, this document introduces a new
  service named "Filtered CDNI Advertisement Service" to allow a client
  to filter a CDNI Advertisement resource using a client-given set of
  CDNI capabilities.  For each entry of the CDNI Advertisement
  response, an entry will only be returned to the client if it contains
  at least one of the client-given CDNI capabilities.  The relationship
  between a filtered CDNI Advertisement resource and a CDNI
  Advertisement resource is similar to the relationship between a
  filtered network/cost map and a network/cost map.

5.1.  Media Type

  A filtered CDNI Advertisement resource uses the same media type
  defined for the CDNI Advertisement resource in Section 3.1:
  "application/alto-cdni+json".

5.2.  HTTP Method

  A filtered CDNI Advertisement resource is requested using the HTTP
  POST method.

5.3.  Accept Input Parameters

  The input parameters for a filtered CDNI Advertisement resource are
  supplied in the entity body of the POST request.  This document
  specifies the input parameters with a data format indicated by the
  media type "application/alto-cdnifilter+json", which is a JSON object
  of type ReqFilteredCDNIAdvertisement where:

     object {
         JSONString capability-type;
         JSONValue capability-value;
     } CDNICapability;

     object {
         CDNICapability cdni-capabilities<0..*>;
     } ReqFilteredCDNIAdvertisement;

  with fields:

  capability-type:  The same as Base Advertisement Object's
     "capability-type" defined in Section 5.1 of [RFC8008].

  capability-value:  The same as Base Advertisement Object's
     "capability-value" defined in Section 5.1 of [RFC8008].

  cdni-capabilities:  A list of CDNI capabilities defined in
     Section 5.1 of [RFC8008] for which footprints are to be returned.
     If this list is empty, the ALTO server MUST interpret it as a
     request for the full CDNI Advertisement resource.  The ALTO server
     MUST interpret entries appearing in this list multiple times as if
     they appeared only once.  If the ALTO server does not define any
     footprints for a CDNI capability, it MUST omit this capability
     from the response.

5.4.  Capabilities

  There are no applicable capabilities.

5.5.  Uses

  The same rules as for the "uses" field of the CDNI Advertisement
  resource apply (see Section 3.5).

5.6.  Response

  If the request is invalid, the response MUST indicate an error using
  ALTO Protocol error handling specified in Section 8.5 of [RFC7285].

  Specifically, a filtered CDNI Advertisement request is invalid if:

  *  the value of "capability-type" is null;

  *  the value of "capability-value" is null; or

  *  the value of "capability-value" is inconsistent with "capability-
     type".

  When a request is invalid, the ALTO server MUST return an
  "E_INVALID_FIELD_VALUE" error defined in Section 8.5.2 of [RFC7285],
  and the "value" field of the error message SHOULD indicate this CDNI
  capability.

  The ALTO server returns a filtered CDNI Advertisement resource for a
  valid request.  The format of a filtered CDNI Advertisement resource
  is the same as a full CDNI Advertisement resource (see Section 3.6).

  The returned filtered CDNI Advertisement resource MUST contain all
  the BaseAdvertisementObject objects satisfying the following
  condition: the CDNI capability object of each included
  BaseAdvertisementObject object MUST follow two constraints:

  *  The "cdni-capabilities" field of the input includes a CDNI
     capability object X having the same "capability-type" as it.

  *  All the mandatory properties in its "capability-value" is a
     superset of mandatory properties in "capability-value" of X
     semantically.

  See Section 5.7.1 for a concrete example.

  The version tag included in the "vtag" field of the response MUST
  correspond to the full CDNI Advertisement resource from which the
  filtered CDNI Advertisement resource is provided.  This ensures that
  a single, canonical version tag is used independently of any
  filtering that is requested by an ALTO client.

5.7.  Examples

  The following examples use the same IRD example as in Section 3.7.1.

5.7.1.  A Basic Example

  This example filters the full CDNI Advertisement resource in
  Section 3.7.2 by selecting only the "http/1.1" delivery protocol
  capability.  Only the second BaseAdvertisementObject in the full
  resource will be returned because the second object's capability is
  "http/1.1" and "https/1.1" delivery protocols, which is the superset
  of "https/1.1" delivery protocol.

    POST /cdnifci/filtered HTTP/1.1
    Host: alto.example.com
    Accept: application/alto-cdni+json
    Content-Type: application/cdnifilter+json
    Content-Length: 176

    {
      "cdni-capabilities": [
        {
          "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
          "capability-value": {
            "delivery-protocols": [ "https/1.1" ]
          }
        }
      ]
    }

    HTTP/1.1 200 OK
    Content-Length: 570
    Content-Type: application/alto-cdni+json

    {
      "meta": {
        "vtag": {
          "resource-id": "my-filtered-cdnifci",
          "tag": "da65eca2eb7a10ce8b059740b0b2e3f8eb1d4785"
        }
      },
      "cdni-advertisement": {
        "capabilities-with-footprints": [
          {
            "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
            "capability-value": {
              "delivery-protocols": [
                "https/1.1",
                "http/1.1"
              ]
            },
            "footprints": [
              {
                "footprint-type": "ipv4cidr",
                "footprint-value": [ "198.51.100.0/24" ]
              }
            ]
          }
        ]
      }
    }

5.7.2.  Incremental Updates

  In this example, the ALTO client only cares about the updates of one
  advertisement object for delivery protocol capability whose value
  includes "https/1.1".  Thus, it adds its limitation of capabilities
  in "input" field of the POST request.

    POST /updates/cdnifci HTTP/1.1
    Host: fcialtoupdate.example.com
    Accept: text/event-stream,application/alto-error+json
    Content-Type: application/alto-updatestreamparams+json
    Content-Length: 346

    {
      "add": {
        "my-filtered-fci-stream": {
          "resource-id": "my-filtered-cdnifci",
          "input": {
            "cdni-capabilities": [
              {
                "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
                "capability-value": {
                  "delivery-protocols": [ "https/1.1" ]
                }
              }
            ]
          }
        }
      }
    }

    HTTP/1.1 200 OK
    Connection: keep-alive
    Content-Type: text/event-stream

    event: application/alto-updatestreamcontrol+json
    data: {"control-uri":
    data: "https://alto.example.com/updates/streams/3141592653590"}

    event: application/alto-cdni+json,my-filtered-fci-stream
    data: { ... filtered CDNI Advertisement resource ... }

    event: application/json-patch+json,my-filtered-fci-stream
    data: [
    data:   {
    data:     "op": "replace",
    data:     "path": "/meta/vtag/tag",
    data:     "value": "a10ce8b059740b0b2e3f8eb1d4785acd42231bfe"
    data:   },
    data:   { "op": "add",
    data:     "path":
    data:     "/cdni-advertisement/capabilities-with-footprints
    /0/footprints/0/footprint-value/-",
    data:     "value": "192.0.2.0/24"
    data:   }
    data: ]

6.  Query Footprint Properties Using ALTO Property Map Service

  Besides the requirement of retrieving footprints of given
  capabilities, another common requirement for uCDN is to query CDNI
  capabilities of given footprints.

  Considering each footprint as an entity with properties including
  CDNI capabilities, a natural way to satisfy this requirement is to
  use the ALTO property map as defined in [RFC9240].  This section
  describes how ALTO clients look up properties for individual
  footprints.  First, it describes how to represent footprint objects
  as entities in the ALTO property map.  Then it describes how to
  represent footprint capabilities as entity properties in the ALTO
  property map.  Finally, it provides examples of the full property map
  and the filtered property map supporting CDNI capabilities, and their
  incremental updates.

6.1.  Representing Footprint Objects as Property Map Entities

  A footprint object has two properties: "footprint-type" and
  "footprint-value".  A "footprint-value" is an array of footprint
  values conforming to the specification associated with the registered
  footprint type ("ipv4cidr", "ipv6cidr", "asn", "countrycode", and
  "altopid").  Considering each ALTO entity defined in [RFC9240] also
  has two properties: entity domain type and domain-specific
  identifier, a straightforward approach to represent a footprint as an
  ALTO entity is to represent its "footprint-type" as an entity domain
  type, and its footprint value as a domain-specific identifier.

  Each existing footprint type can be represented as an entity domain
  type as follows:

  *  According to [RFC9240], "ipv4" and "ipv6" are two predefined
     entity domain types, which can be used to represent "ipv4cidr" and
     "ipv6cidr" footprints respectively.  Note that both "ipv4" and
     "ipv6" domains can include not only hierarchical addresses but
     also individual addresses.  Therefore, a "ipv4cidr" or "ipv6cidr"
     footprint with the longest prefix can also be represented by an
     individual address entity.  When the uCDN receives a property map
     with individual addresses in an "ipv4" or "ipv6" domain, it can
     translate them as corresponding "ipv4cidr" or "ipv6cidr"
     footprints with the longest prefix.

  *  "pid" is also a predefined entity domain type, which can be used
     to represent "altopid" footprints.  Note that "pid" is a resource-
     specific entity domain.  To represent an "altopid" footprint, the
     specifying information resource of the corresponding "pid" entity
     domain MUST be the dependent network map used by the CDNI
     Advertisement resource providing this "altopid" footprint.

  *  However, no existing entity domain type can represent "asn" and
     "countrycode" footprints.  To represent footprint-type "asn" and
     "countrycode", this document registers two new entity domains in
     Section 7 in addition to the ones in [RFC9240].

  Here is an example of representing a footprint object of "ipv4cidr"
  type as a set of "ipv4" entities in the ALTO property map.  The
  representation of the footprint object of "ipv6cidr" type is similar.

  { "footprint-type": "ipv4cidr",
    "footprint-value": ["192.0.2.0/24", "198.51.100.0/24"]
  } --> "ipv4:192.0.2.0/24", "ipv4:198.51.100.0/24"

  And here is an example of the corresponding footprint object of
  "ipv4cidr" type represented by an individual address in an "ipv4"
  domain in the ALTO property map.  The translation of the entities in
  an "ipv6" domain is similar.

  "ipv4:203.0.113.100" --> {
    "footprint-type": "ipv4cidr",
    "footprint-value": ["203.0.113.100/32"]
  }

6.1.1.  ASN Domain

  The ASN domain associates property values with Autonomous Systems in
  the Internet.

6.1.1.1.  Entity Domain Type

  The entity domain type of the ASN domain is "asn" (in lowercase).

6.1.1.2.  Domain-Specific Entity Identifiers

  The entity identifier of an entity in an ASN domain MUST be encoded
  as a string consisting of the characters "as" (in lowercase) followed
  by the ASN [RFC6793] as a decimal number without leading zeros.

6.1.1.3.  Hierarchy and Inheritance

  There is no hierarchy or inheritance for properties associated with
  ASN.

6.1.2.  COUNTRYCODE Domain

  The COUNTRYCODE domain associates property values with countries.

6.1.2.1.  Entity Domain Type

  The entity domain type of the COUNTRYCODE domain is "countrycode" (in
  lowercase).

6.1.2.2.  Domain-Specific Entity Identifiers

  The entity identifier of an entity in a COUNTRYCODE domain is encoded
  as an ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code [ISO3166-1] in lowercase.

6.1.2.3.  Hierarchy and Inheritance

  There is no hierarchy or inheritance for properties associated with
  country codes.

6.2.  Representing CDNI Capabilities as Property Map Entity Properties

  This document defines a new entity property type called "cdni-
  capabilities".  An ALTO server can provide a property map resource
  mapping the "cdni-capabilities" entity property type for a CDNI
  Advertisement resource that it provides to an "ipv4", "ipv6", "asn",
  or "countrycode" entity domain.

6.2.1.  Defining Information Resource Media Type for Property Type cdni-
       capabilities

  The entity property type "cdni-capabilities" allows defining
  resource-specific entity properties.  When resource-specific entity
  properties are defined with entity property type "cdni-capabilities",
  the defining information resource for a "cdni-capabilities" property
  MUST be a CDNI Advertisement resource provided by the ALTO server.
  The media type of the defining information resource for a "cdni-
  capabilities" property is therefore:

  application/alto-cdni+json

6.2.2.  Intended Semantics of Property Type cdni-capabilities

  The purpose of a "cdni-capabilities" property for an entity is to
  indicate all the CDNI capabilities that a corresponding CDNI
  Advertisement resource provides for the footprint represented by this
  entity.  Thus, the value of a "cdni-capabilities" property MUST be a
  JSON array.  Each element in a "cdni-capabilities" property MUST be a
  JSON object in the format of CDNICapability (see Section 5.3).  The
  value of a "cdni-capabilities" property for an "ipv4", "ipv6", "asn",
  "countrycode", or "altopid" entity MUST include all the
  CDNICapability objects satisfying the following conditions: (1) they
  are provided by the defining CDNI Advertisement resource, and (2) the
  represented footprint object of this entity is in their footprint
  restrictions.

6.3.  Examples

  The following examples use the same IRD example given by
  Section 3.7.1.

6.3.1.  Property Map

  This example shows a full property map in which entities are
  footprints and entities' property is "cdni-capabilities".

   GET /propmap/full/cdnifci HTTP/1.1
   Host: alto.example.com
   Accept: application/alto-propmap+json,application/alto-error+json

   HTTP/1.1 200 OK
   Content-Length: 1522
   Content-Type: application/alto-propmap+json

   {
     "property-map": {
       "meta": {
         "dependent-vtags": [
           { "resource-id": "my-default-cdnifci",
             "tag": "7915dc0290c2705481c491a2b4ffbec482b3cf62"}
         ]
       },
       "countrycode:us": {
         "my-default-cdnifci.cdni-capabilities": [
           { "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
             "capability-value": {
               "delivery-protocols": ["http/1.1"]}}]
       },
       "ipv4:192.0.2.0/24": {
         "my-default-cdnifci.cdni-capabilities": [
           { "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
             "capability-value": {
               "delivery-protocols": ["http/1.1"]}}]
       },
       "ipv4:198.51.100.0/24": {
         "my-default-cdnifci.cdni-capabilities": [
           { "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
             "capability-value": {
               "delivery-protocols": ["https/1.1", "http/1.1"]}}]
       },
       "ipv4:203.0.113.0/24": {
         "my-default-cdnifci.cdni-capabilities": [
           { "capability-type": "FCI.AcquisitionProtocol",
             "capability-value": {
               "acquisition-protocols": ["http/1.1"]}}]
       },
       "ipv6:2001:db8::/32": {
         "my-default-cdnifci.cdni-capabilities": [
           { "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
             "capability-value": {
               "delivery-protocols": ["http/1.1"]}}]
       },
       "asn:as64496": {
         "my-default-cdnifci.cdni-capabilities": [
           { "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
             "capability-value": {
               "delivery-protocols": ["https/1.1", "http/1.1"]}}]
       }
     }
   }

6.3.2.  Filtered Property Map

  This example uses the filtered property Map Service to get "pid" and
  "cdni-capabilities" properties for two footprints "ipv4:192.0.2.0/24"
  and "ipv6:2001:db8::/32".

     POST /propmap/lookup/cdnifci-pid HTTP/1.1
     Host: alto.example.com
     Content-Type: application/alto-propmapparams+json
     Accept: application/alto-propmap+json,application/alto-error+json
     Content-Length: 181

     {
       "entities": [
         "ipv4:192.0.2.0/24",
         "ipv6:2001:db8::/32"
       ],
       "properties": [ "my-default-cdnifci.cdni-capabilities",
                       "my-default-networkmap.pid" ]
     }

   HTTP/1.1 200 OK
   Content-Length: 796
   Content-Type: application/alto-propmap+json

   {
     "property-map": {
       "meta": {
         "dependent-vtags": [
            {"resource-id": "my-default-cdnifci",
              "tag": "7915dc0290c2705481c491a2b4ffbec482b3cf62"},
            {"resource-id": "my-default-networkmap",
              "tag": "7915dc0290c2705481c491a2b4ffbec482b3cf63"}
         ]
       },
       "ipv4:192.0.2.0/24": {
         "my-default-cdnifci.cdni-capabilities": [
           {"capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
            "capability-value": {"delivery-protocols": ["http/1.1"]}}],
         "my-default-networkmap.pid": "pid1"
       },
       "ipv6:2001:db8::/32": {
         "my-default-cdnifci.cdni-capabilities": [
           {"capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
            "capability-value": {"delivery-protocols": ["http/1.1"]}}],
         "my-default-networkmap.pid": "pid3"
       }
     }
   }

6.3.3.  Incremental Updates

  In this example, the ALTO client is interested in updates for the
  properties "cdni-capabilities" and "pid" of two footprints
  "ipv4:192.0.2.0/24" and "countrycode:fr".

   POST /updates/properties HTTP/1.1
   Host: alto.example.com
   Accept: text/event-stream,application/alto-error+json
   Content-Type: application/alto-updatestreamparams+json
   Content-Length: 339

   {
     "add": {
       "fci-propmap-stream": {
         "resource-id": "filtered-cdnifci-property-map",
         "input": {
           "properties": [ "my-default-cdnifci.cdni-capabilities",
                           "my-default-networkmap.pid" ],
           "entities": [ "ipv4:192.0.2.0/24",
                         "ipv6:2001:db8::/32" ]
         }
       }
     }
   }

   HTTP/1.1 200 OK
   Connection: keep-alive
   Content-Type: text/event-stream

   event: application/alto-updatestreamcontrol+json
   data: {"control-uri":
   data: "https://alto.example.com/updates/streams/1414213562373"}

   event: application/alto-cdni+json,fci-propmap-stream
   data: { ... filtered property map ... }

   event: application/merge-patch+json,fci-propmap-stream
   data: {
   data:   "property-map": {
   data:     "meta": {
   data:       "dependent-vtags": [
   data:         { "resource-id": "my-default-cdnifci",
   data:           "tag": "2beeac8ee23c3dd1e98a73fd30df80ece9fa5627"},
   data:         { "resource-id": "my-default-networkmap",
   data:           "tag": "7915dc0290c2705481c491a2b4ffbec482b3cf63"}
   data:       ]
   data:     },
   data:     "ipv4:192.0.2.0/24": {
   data:       "my-default-cdnifci.cdni-capabilities": [
   data:         { "capability-type": "FCI.DeliveryProtocol",
   data:           "capability-value": {
   data:             "delivery-protocols": ["http/1.1", "https/1.1"]}}]
   data:     }
   data:   }
   data: }

   event: application/json-patch+json,fci-propmap-stream
   data: [
   data:   { "op": "replace",
   data:     "path": "/meta/dependent-vtags/0/tag",
   data:     "value": "61b23185a50dc7b334577507e8f00ff8c3b409e4"
   data:   },
   data:   { "op": "replace",
   data:     "path":
   data:     "/property-map/countrycode:fr/my-default-networkmap.pid",
   data:     "value": "pid5"
   data:   }
   data: ]

7.  IANA Considerations

  This document defines two new media types: "application/alto-
  cdni+json", as described in Section 7.1, and "application/
  cdnifilter+json", as described in Section 7.2.  It also defines a new
  CDNI Metadata Footprint Type (Section 7.3), two new ALTO entity
  domain types (Section 7.4), and a new ALTO entity property type
  (Section 7.5).

7.1.  application/alto-cdni+json Media Type

  Type name:
     application

  Subtype name:
     alto-cdni+json

  Required parameters:
     N/A

  Optional parameters:
     N/A

  Encoding considerations:
     Encoding considerations are identical to those specified for the
     "application/json" media type.  See [RFC8259].

  Security considerations:
     Security considerations related to the generation and consumption
     of ALTO Protocol messages are discussed in Section 15 of
     [RFC7285].

  Interoperability considerations:
     N/A

  Published specification:
     Section 3 of RFC 9241

  Applications that use this media type:
     ALTO servers and ALTO clients [RFC7285] either stand alone or are
     embedded within other applications that provide CDNI interfaces
     for uCDNs or dCDNs.

  Fragment identifier considerations:
     N/A

  Additional information:
     Magic number(s):  N/A

     File extension(s):  N/A

     Macintosh file type code(s):  N/A

  Person & email address to contact for further information:
     See Authors' Addresses section.

  Intended usage:
     COMMON

  Restrictions on usage:
     N/A

  Author:
     See Authors' Addresses section.

  Change controller:
     Internet Engineering Task Force ([email protected])

7.2.  application/alto-cdnifilter+json Media Type

  Type name:
     application

  Subtype name:
     alto-cdnifilter+json

  Required parameters:
     N/A

  Optional parameters:
     N/A

  Encoding considerations:
     Encoding considerations are identical to those specified for the
     "application/json" media type.  See [RFC8259].

  Security considerations:
     Security considerations related to the generation and consumption
     of ALTO Protocol messages are discussed in Section 15 of
     [RFC7285].

  Interoperability considerations:
     N/A

  Published specification:
     Section 5 of RFC 9241

  Applications that use this media type:
     ALTO servers and ALTO clients [RFC7285] either stand alone or are
     embedded within other applications that provide CDNI interfaces
     for uCDNs or dCDNs and supports CDNI capability-based filtering.

  Fragment identifier considerations:
     N/A

  Additional information:
     Magic number(s):  N/A

     File extension(s):  N/A

     Macintosh file type code(s):  N/A

  Person & email address to contact for further information:
     See Authors' Addresses section.

  Intended usage:
     COMMON

  Restrictions on usage:
     N/A

  Author:
     See Authors' Addresses section.

  Change controller:
     Internet Engineering Task Force ([email protected])

7.3.  CDNI Metadata Footprint Types Registry

  This document updates the "CDNI Metadata Footprint Types" registry
  created by Section 7.2 of [RFC8006].  A new footprint type, which is
  listed in Table 1, has been registered.

     +================+=====================+=====================+
     | Footprint Type | Description         | Reference           |
     +================+=====================+=====================+
     | altopid        | A list of PID names | RFC 9241, Section 4 |
     +----------------+---------------------+---------------------+

                 Table 1: CDNI Metadata Footprint Type

7.4.  ALTO Entity Domain Types Registry

  This document updates the "ALTO Entity Domain Types" registry created
  by Section 11.2 of [RFC9240].  Two new entity domain types, which are
  listed in Table 2, have been registered.

   +=============+============+=============+=============+=========+
   | Identifier  | Entity     | Hierarchy   | Media Type  | Mapping |
   |             | Identifier | and         | of Defining | to ALTO |
   |             | Encoding   | Inheritance | Resource    | Address |
   |             |            |             |             | Type    |
   +=============+============+=============+=============+=========+
   | asn         | See RFC    | None        | None        | false   |
   |             | 9241,      |             |             |         |
   |             | Section    |             |             |         |
   |             | 6.1.1.2    |             |             |         |
   +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+---------+
   | countrycode | See RFC    | None        | None        | false   |
   |             | 9241,      |             |             |         |
   |             | Section    |             |             |         |
   |             | 6.1.2.2    |             |             |         |
   +-------------+------------+-------------+-------------+---------+

              Table 2: Additional ALTO Entity Domain Types

7.5.  ALTO Entity Property Types Registry

  This document updates the "ALTO Entity Property Types" registry
  created by Section 11.3 of [RFC9240].  A new entity property type,
  which is listed in Table 3, has been registered.

     +===================+====================+===================+
     | Identifier        | Intended Semantics | Media Type of     |
     |                   |                    | Defining Resource |
     +===================+====================+===================+
     | cdni-capabilities | See RFC 9241,      | application/alto- |
     |                   | Section 6.2        | cdni+json         |
     +-------------------+--------------------+-------------------+

             Table 3: Additional ALTO Entity Property Type

8.  Security Considerations

  As an extension of the base ALTO Protocol [RFC7285], this document
  fits into the architecture of the base protocol, and hence Security
  Considerations of the base protocol (Section 15 of [RFC7285]) fully
  apply when this extension is provided by an ALTO server.

  In the context of CDNI Advertisement, the following security risk
  scenarios should be considered:

  *  Authenticity and integrity of ALTO information: an attacker may
     disguise itself as an ALTO server for a dCDN (e.g., by starting a
     on-path attack) and provide false capabilities and footprints to a
     uCDN using the CDNI Advertisement Service.  Such false information
     may lead a uCDN to (1) select an incorrect dCDN to serve user
     requests or (2) skip uCDNs in good conditions.  To address this
     risk, protection strategies in Section 15.1.2 of [RFC7285] can be
     applied.

  *  Potential undesirable guidance from authenticated ALTO
     information: a dCDN can provide a uCDN with limited capabilities
     and smaller footprint coverage so that the dCDN can avoid
     transferring traffic for a uCDN that they should have to transfer.
     To reduce this risk, the protection strategies in Section 15.2.2
     of [RFC7285] can be considered.

  *  Confidentiality and privacy of ALTO information: footprint
     properties integrated with ALTO property maps may expose network
     location identifiers (e.g., IP addresses or fine-grained PIDs).
     To address this risk, the protection strategy for risk types (1)
     and (3) as described in Section 15.3 of [RFC7285] can be
     considered.

  *  For availability of ALTO services, an attacker may conduct
     service-degradation attacks using services defined in this
     document to disable ALTO services of a network.  It may request
     potentially large, full CDNI Advertisement resources from an ALTO
     server in a dCDN continuously in order to consume the bandwidth
     resources of that ALTO server.  It may also query filtered
     property Map Services with many smaller individual footprints in
     order to consume the computation resources of the ALTO server.  To
     mitigate these risks, the protection strategies in Section 15.5.2
     of [RFC7285] can be applied.

  Although protection strategies as described in Section 15 of
  [RFC7285] should be applied to address aforementioned security and
  privacy considerations, two special cases need to be included as
  follows:

  *  As required by Section 7 of [RFC8008],

     |  All protocols that implement these capabilities and footprint
     |  advertisement objects are REQUIRED to provide integrity and
     |  authentication services.

     Therefore, the uCDN (ALTO Client) MUST be authenticated to the
     dCDN (ALTO Server).  And the dCDN (ALTO Server) MUST support HTTP
     Digest Authentication [RFC7616] and MAY also support TLS mutual
     authentication [RFC8446].  The authentication method will need to
     be negotiated out of band and is out of scope for this document,
     as is the approach for provisioning and managing these
     credentials.

  *  One specific information leakage risk introduced by this document
     cannot be addressed by these strategies.  In particular, if a dCDN
     A signs agreements with multiple uCDNs without any isolation, dCDN
     A may disclose extra information of one uCDN to another one.  In
     that case, one uCDN may redirect requests that should not have to
     be served by dCDN A to dCDN A.

     To reduce the risk, a dCDN SHOULD isolate full and/or filtered
     CDNI Advertisement resources for different uCDNs.  It could
     consider generating URIs of different full and/or filtered CDNI
     Advertisement resources by hashing its company ID, a uCDN's
     company ID as well as their agreements.  A dCDN SHOULD avoid
     exposing all full and/or filtered CDNI Advertisement resources in
     one of its IRDs.

9.  References

9.1.  Normative References

  [ISO3166-1]
             International Organization for Standardization, "Codes for
             the representation of names of countries and their
             subdivisions -- Part 1: Country codes", ISO 3166-1:2020,
             August 2020.

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.

  [RFC6793]  Vohra, Q. and E. Chen, "BGP Support for Four-Octet
             Autonomous System (AS) Number Space", RFC 6793,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC6793, December 2012,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6793>.

  [RFC7285]  Alimi, R., Ed., Penno, R., Ed., Yang, Y., Ed., Kiesel, S.,
             Previdi, S., Roome, W., Shalunov, S., and R. Woundy,
             "Application-Layer Traffic Optimization (ALTO) Protocol",
             RFC 7285, DOI 10.17487/RFC7285, September 2014,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7285>.

  [RFC7493]  Bray, T., Ed., "The I-JSON Message Format", RFC 7493,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC7493, March 2015,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7493>.

  [RFC7616]  Shekh-Yusef, R., Ed., Ahrens, D., and S. Bremer, "HTTP
             Digest Access Authentication", RFC 7616,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC7616, September 2015,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7616>.

  [RFC8006]  Niven-Jenkins, B., Murray, R., Caulfield, M., and K. Ma,
             "Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI)
             Metadata", RFC 8006, DOI 10.17487/RFC8006, December 2016,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8006>.

  [RFC8008]  Seedorf, J., Peterson, J., Previdi, S., van Brandenburg,
             R., and K. Ma, "Content Delivery Network Interconnection
             (CDNI) Request Routing: Footprint and Capabilities
             Semantics", RFC 8008, DOI 10.17487/RFC8008, December 2016,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8008>.

  [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
             2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
             May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.

  [RFC8259]  Bray, T., Ed., "The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data
             Interchange Format", STD 90, RFC 8259,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC8259, December 2017,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8259>.

  [RFC8446]  Rescorla, E., "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol
             Version 1.3", RFC 8446, DOI 10.17487/RFC8446, August 2018,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8446>.

  [RFC8895]  Roome, W. and Y. Yang, "Application-Layer Traffic
             Optimization (ALTO) Incremental Updates Using Server-Sent
             Events (SSE)", RFC 8895, DOI 10.17487/RFC8895, November
             2020, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8895>.

  [RFC9240]  Roome, W., Randriamasy, S., Yang, Y., Zhang, J., and K.
             Gao, "An Extension for Application-Layer Traffic
             Optimization (ALTO): Entity Property Maps", RFC 9240,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC9240, July 2022,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9240>.

9.2.  Informative References

  [ALTO-PATH-VECTOR]
             Gao, K., Lee, Y., Randriamasy, S., Yang, Y. R., and J. J.
             Zhang, "An ALTO Extension: Path Vector", Work in Progress,
             Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-alto-path-vector-25, 20 March
             2022, <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-
             alto-path-vector-25>.

  [RFC5693]  Seedorf, J. and E. Burger, "Application-Layer Traffic
             Optimization (ALTO) Problem Statement", RFC 5693,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC5693, October 2009,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5693>.

  [RFC6707]  Niven-Jenkins, B., Le Faucheur, F., and N. Bitar, "Content
             Distribution Network Interconnection (CDNI) Problem
             Statement", RFC 6707, DOI 10.17487/RFC6707, September
             2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6707>.

  [RFC7971]  Stiemerling, M., Kiesel, S., Scharf, M., Seidel, H., and
             S. Previdi, "Application-Layer Traffic Optimization (ALTO)
             Deployment Considerations", RFC 7971,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC7971, October 2016,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7971>.

  [RFC7975]  Niven-Jenkins, B., Ed. and R. van Brandenburg, Ed.,
             "Request Routing Redirection Interface for Content
             Delivery Network (CDN) Interconnection", RFC 7975,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC7975, October 2016,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7975>.

Acknowledgments

  The authors thank Matt Caulfield, Danny Alex Lachos Perez, Daryl
  Malas, and Sanjay Mishra for their timely reviews and invaluable
  comments.  Big thanks also to the ALTO WG Chairs (Qin Wu and Vijay
  Gurbani), all the directorate reviewers, and the IESG reviewers
  (Martin Duke, Erik Kline, Martin Vigoureux, Murray Kucherawy, Roman
  Danyliw, Zaheduzzaman Sarker, Éric Vyncke, and Francesca Palombini),
  for their thorough reviews, discussions, guidance, and shepherding,
  which further improve this document.

  Jan Seedorf has been partially supported by the GreenICN project
  (GreenICN: Architecture and Applications of Green Information Centric
  Networking), a research project supported jointly by the European
  Commission under its 7th Framework Program (contract no. 608518) and
  the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology
  (NICT) in Japan (contract no. 167).  The views and conclusions
  contained herein are those of the authors and should not be
  interpreted as necessarily representing the official policies or
  endorsements, either expressed or implied, of the GreenICN project,
  the European Commission, or NICT.

  This document has also been supported by the Coordination Support
  Action entitled 'Supporting European Experts Presence in
  International Standardisation Activities in ICT' (StandICT.eu
  <https://www.standict.eu/>) funded by the European Commission under
  the Horizon 2020 Programme with Grant Agreement no. 780439.  The
  views and conclusions contained herein are those of the authors and
  should not be interpreted as necessarily representing the official
  policies or endorsements, either expressed or implied, of the
  European Commission.

Contributors

  Xiao Shawn Lin
  Huawei
  2222 Newjinqiao Rd
  Shanghai
  200125
  China
  Phone: +86-15316812351
  Email: [email protected]


Authors' Addresses

  Jan Seedorf
  HFT Stuttgart - Univ. of Applied Sciences
  Schellingstrasse 24
  70174 Stuttgart
  Germany
  Phone: +49-0711-8926-2801
  Email: [email protected]


  Y. Richard Yang
  Yale University
  51 Prospect Street
  New Haven, CT 06511
  United States of America
  Phone: +1-203-432-6400
  Email: [email protected]
  URI:   http://www.cs.yale.edu/~yry/


  Kevin J. Ma
  Ericsson
  43 Nagog Park
  Acton, MA 01720
  United States of America
  Phone: +1-978-844-5100
  Email: [email protected]


  Jon Peterson
  NeuStar
  1800 Sutter St., Suite 570
  Concord, CA 94520
  United States of America
  Email: [email protected]


  Jingxuan Jensen Zhang
  Tongji University
  4800 Cao'an Hwy
  Shanghai
  201804
  China
  Email: [email protected]