Network Working Group                                       R. Hedberg
Request for Comments: 2378                             Umea University
Category: Informational                                       P. Pomes
                                                       QUALCOMM, Inc.
                                                       September 1998


                The CCSO Nameserver (Ph) Architecture

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  The Ph Nameserver from the Computing and Communications Services
  Office (CCSO), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign has for
  some time now been used by several organizations as their choice of
  publicly available database for information about people as well as
  other things.  This document provides a formal definition of the
  client-server protocol.  The Ph service as specified in this document
  is built around an information model, a client command language and
  the server responses.

1.  Overview

1.1.  Basic Information Model

  At its simplest the Ph database can be thought of as a computer-
  resident "phone book".  However, it can be used to collect arbitrary
  information about people, and in response to a query about an object
  named in the database, return information about that entity.  It is
  in short a nameserver for people and objects.  It was designed to
  keep a relatively small amount of arbitrary information about a
  relatively large number of people or things, and provide access to
  that information over the Internet.  In order to structure the
  information the manager of the database has to decide which views to
  present of the real-world objects that are to be represented in the
  database.  Each view is then composed of a number of fields and their
  values.  To support this concept Ph has the notion of named
  information, i.e., categorizing information into what are called
  fields and assigning descriptive names to those fields.



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  Even if the database resides and is reachable from the Internet it is
  local in the meaning that no server is supposed to be able to refer a
  client to another server which might hold the wanted information.
  However a server may contain a list of other Nameservers which can be
  used by clients to query other Nameservers for information.

1.1.1.  Fields

  A field descriptor is associated with each field and is used to
  describe the type and behavior of the field.  A field descriptor
  includes the fieldname, the maximum length of information the field
  can store before truncation, keywords describing the properties of
  the field as well as free text describing what kind of information
  the field is supposed to hold.

  The keywords can be any of the following:

  Always:   Forces the field's contents to be always printed in
            addition to whatever fields specified by the query.

  Any:      This field is always searched by queries. To be most
            use ful, a field marked as Any should also have the Indexed
            and Lookup keywords as well.

  Change:   Can be changed by the owner of the entry.

  Default:  Printed if no return clause is given in the query.

  Encrypt:  Must be encrypted before transmission.

  ForcePub: Viewable/searchable regardless of the content of the
            suppress field

  Indexed:  Fields that are kept track of in the database's index for
            efficient lookups.  At least one indexed field must be
            present in each query.

  LocalPub: May be viewed by anyone in the "local" domain or address
            space.  Fields with this keyword are completely invisible
            outside of the "local" domain.  They will not be shown with
            the fields command (section 3.3), and are disallowed in
            query commands or return clauses (section 3.8).

  Lookup:   May be used in the selection part of a query.  A Field
            without this keyword may not be used to select entries.

  NoMeta:   Wildcard searches are disallowed.




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  NoPeople: No entry of type "person" may include this field.

  Private:  Field may be viewed by Heros (section 1.4) only.

  Public:   May be viewed by anyone.  Fields not marked with this
            keyword may only be viewed by the entry's owner or a Hero.

  Sacred:   Changes to the field are prohibited except via non-network
            invocations of the server, i.e., from a tty, file, or pipe.

  Turn:     Users may turn off visibility of a field to everyone except
            themselves and Heros by prefixing the field text with '*'.

  Unique:   Any change to the field will be rejected if the change
            causes the modified field to match the same field in any
            other entry.

1.1.2.  Character Sets

  Historically Ph has been restricted to only handle printable
  characters, that is characters with hexadecimal values between 0x20
  and 0x7f.  Lately with the spreading of 8-bit clean Operating Systems
  there is no reason to keep this limitation.

  This document therefore proposes that ISO-8859-1 shall be regarded as
  an alternative character set for Ph, the default still being US-
  ASCII.

  Clients that utilize ISO-8859-1 should request that the server return
  ISO-8859-1 by using the "set"-command.

  In the instance that values are stored using ISO-8859-1 and are to be
  shown to a client expecting US-ASCII, the characters with character
  codes outside of the US-ASCII range should be displayed in the
  "Quoted-Printable" content-transfer-encoding form defined in RFC-2045
  [MIME].

  1.2.  Standardization issues

  Each Nameserver manager is in essence free to name new fields to suit
  the special needs of his/her organization.  But in order to make the
  directory service useful outside of the organization it is
  recommended that a core set of standard fields always should be
  present.

  Therefore this document defines a couple of standard collections of
  fields (Appendix A).




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  Also note that the architecture makes no assumption about the search
  and retrieval mechanisms used within individual servers.  Operators
  are thereby free to use any kind of dedicated databases, fast
  indexing software or even gateways to other directory services to
  store and retrieve the information, if desired.

  Ph simply functions as a known front-end, offering a simple data
  model in addition to a well known port and simple query language.

1.3.  Conventions Used in this Document

  In examples, "C:" and "S:" indicate lines sent by the client and
  server respectively.

1.4.  Heros

  For Ph a Hero is equivalent to a superuser or operator.  Being in
  Hero mode means that some or all artificial limits are removed; full
  Heros may change any field in any entry in the database, as well as
  view as many entries as they wish.  Heros can also be limited to one
  field of one other entry.  Hero mode is used mostly for
  administrative purposes, delegation of group authority over selected
  fields, and is controlled by the acl field.

2.  Basic Operation

  Initially, the server host starts the Ph service by listening on TCP
  port 105.  When a client host wishes to make use of the service, it
  establishes a TCP connection to the server host.  The client and the
  Ph server then exchange commands and responses (respectively) until
  the connection is closed or aborted.

2.1.  Command syntax

  Commands in Ph consist of a keyword optionally followed by zero or
  more keywords or values, separated by spaces, tabs or newlines, and
  followed by a carriage return-linefeed (CRLF) pair. A more thorough
  description using BNF is given in Appendix C.

  Values containing spaces, tabs or newlines must be enclosed in double
  quotes ('"').  In addition the sequences "\n", "\t","\"" and "\\" may
  be used to mean newline, tab, double quote and backslash,
  respectively.

  Keywords must be given in lower case; case in the values of fields is
  preserved, although queries are not case-sensitive.





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2.2.  Response syntax

  Responses consist of a result code followed by additional information
  possibly separated by entry index and/or field name and are
  terminated by a CRLF pair.

     result code:[entry index:][field name:]text

  Responses to some commands might be multi-lined.  In these cases each
  line in the response, except the last, has the appropriate result
  code negated (prefaced with "-").  The last line then starts with the
  appropriate result code without negation.  Each line must be
  terminated by a CRLF pair.

  If a particular command can apply to more than one entry, then the
  multilined response must be so organized that all information
  pertaining to each entry is returned on consecutive lines, and that
  each of those lines must have one and the same entry index directly
  following the resultcode.  The first entry index should be 1 and
  incremented each time a new entry is referred to.

     C: query hedberg return email name title
     S: 102:There were 3 matches to your request.
     S: -200:1:        email: [email protected]
     S: -200:1:         name: Carl Johan Hedberg
     S: -200:1:        title: Student
     S: -200:2:        email: [email protected]
     S: -200:2:         name: Par Hedberg
     S: -200:2:        title: Student
     S: -200:3:        email: [email protected]
     S: -200:3:         name: Roland Hedberg
     S: -200:3:        title: Boss of the Network group
     S: 200:Ok

  Commands that can apply to more than one field must have the name of
  the field to which the response applies directly following the entry
  index.

  The text of the response will be either an error message in human
  readable format, or data from the Nameserver.  Whitespace (spaces or
  tabs) may appear anywhere in the response, but the field name and
  text columns if present must each begin with a whitespace character.

  Since more than one specific piece of information may be manipulated
  by a particular command, it is possible for parts of a command to
  succeed, while other parts of the same command fail.  This situation
  is handled as a single multi-line response with the result code
  changing as appropriate.



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  As for FTP, the result codes are in the range 100-699 (or from -699
  to -100 for multiline responses), where the leading digit has the
  following significance:

     1: In progress
     2: Success
     3: More information needed
     4: Temporary failure; it may be worthwhile to try again.
     5: Permanent failure
     6: Phquery specific codes

  Many commands generate more than one line of response; every client
  should be prepared to deal with such continued responses.  Note that
  a command is finished when and only when the result code on a
  response line (treated as a signed integer) is greater than or equal
  to 200.

  Clients should assume that any numeric response, within the above
  mentioned ranges, are valid.  Also note that the server is allowed to
  send one or more lines with result codes between -199 - -100 (the
  leading "-" indicates a continuation line) and 100 - 199, as status
  information, before the actual results are transmitted.

2.3.  Format of a search string

  Matching is not sensitive to upper or lower case letters and is
  normally done on a word-by-word basis. That is, both the query
  expression and the entry information is broken up into words, and
  individual words are compared using exact matching.  If the order of
  the words is important in a query, then the query string can be
  surrounded by '"' (double quotes), whereby the complete search string
  is matched against the information in the Nameserver database.

  Word delimiters are the following characters: <SPACE>, <TAB>, <NEW-
  LINE>, ",", ";" and ":" .  These characters are not indexed and
  should not be part of the search string.

  However, special symbols, called "wildcard" characters, can be used
  if the exact spelling is unknown.  The '*' (asterisk, 0x2A) is used
  in place of zero or more characters, '+' (plus, 0x2B) in place of one
  or more unknown characters, and '?' (question mark, 0x3F) can be used
  when exactly one character is unknown.  If the unknown character can
  be one of a limited set this can be specified by surrounding the set
  with brackets, e.g., [ei] means that in that place an 'e' or an 'i'
  would match.






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3.  Commands

3.1.  status

  status

  Prints the message of the day and the current status of the
  nameserver.

     C: status
     S: 100:Qi server $Revision: 1.6 $
     S: 100:Ph passwords may be obtained at CCSO Accounting,
     S: 100:1420 Digital Computer Lab, between 8:30 and 5 Monday-Friday.
     S: 100:Be sure to bring your U of I ID card.
     S: 200:Database ready

3.2.  siteinfo

  siteinfo

  Returns information about the servers site. Possible fields are

  Version        Version information for the server.
  Maildomain     The mail domain to use for phquery-type mail.
  Mailfield      The field containing the specific email address.
  Mailbox        Mandatory entry that names the field to use as
                 maildrop.
  Administrator  Guru in charge of service.
  Passwords      Person in charge of ordinary password/change requests.
  Authenticate   Authentication methods supported by the server,
                 ordered in the site-preferred way.  Presently the
                 following options are defined:

                   1   attempt auto login
                   2   allowed to be interactive if needed
                   4   use ANSI X9.9 challenge/response
                   8   use v4 Kerberos login
                   16  use v5 Kerberos [KRB5] login
                   32  use GSS-API [GSS-API] login
                   64  use email login
                   128 password encrypted response to challenge
                   256 use clear-text password
                   512 use HMAC [HMAC] with SHA-1 of challenge string








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  Example

       C: siteinfo
       S: -200:1:version:3.1
       S: -200:2:maildomain:umu.se
       S: -200:3:mailfield:alias
       S: -200:4:mailbox:email
       S: -200:5:administrator:[email protected]
       S: -200:6:passwords:[email protected]
       S: -200:7:authenticate:64:32:128
       S: 200: Ok.

  The mail fields in the siteinfo command direct how address
  information stored in the Nameserver is to be used for delivering
  mail.

  The specific (username, host) pair to where a user's mail should be
  sent for final delivery is stored in the field named by {mailbox}.
  Phquery and like utilities will use this field.

  To construct a useable email address from Nameserver information, the
  algorithm below is followed:

       if ({maildomain} is not null) then
            address = (contents of {mailfield})@{maildomain}
       else
            address = (contents of {mailfield})

  Some existing client software will not format email addresses
  correctly if the value of {mailbox} is set to anything other than
  "email" when {maildomain} is non-empty.

  If {mailbox} is set to anything other than {email}, {maildomain} must
  be reported empty by the siteinfo command.  Also reformatting of each
  record's {mailfield} must be done by the server before reporting it
  to the client.

3.3.  fields

  fields [field ...]

  Without an argument, a list of all available field descriptors should
  be delivered.  Any space-separated argument(s) restricts the list to
  the named fields.  Fields marked with the "LocalPub" keyword (section
  1.1.1) should not be delivered outside of the local domain.






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  The output of the command consists of two lines describing each
  field.  The first line defines the field in technical terms (max
  length and field attributes), while the second line is a brief
  description of what the field is intended to    hold.  The second
  number of each response is the field id number.

     C: fields
     S: -200:6:alias:max 32 Indexed Lookup Public Default
     S: -200:6:alias:Unique name for user.
     S: -200:3:name:max 64 Indexed Lookup Public Default
     S: -200:3:name:Fullname
     S: -200:2:email:max 128 Lookup Public Default
     S: -200:2:email:Account to receive electronic mail.
     S: -200:16:other:max 256 Lookup Public Default Change
     S: -200:16:other:Other info the user finds important.
     S: -200:33:home_phone:max 60 Lookup Public Change Turn
     S: -200:33:home_phone:Home telephone number.
     S: 200:Ok.

3.4.  id

  id information

  Enters the given information in the Nameserver's log.  This command
  is used by the Ph client to enter the user id of the person running
  it.

3.5.  set

  set [option[=value] ...]

  Sets the named option for this nameserver session to a value.  The
  default string "on" is used if no value is supplied.  Used without
  arguments it return the settable options and their current value.
  Some common options are

  echo      If on, echo the client's commands back to the client.
  limit     Changes that affect more than the specified number of
               entries results in an error.
  charset   Return responses to the client in the character set
               specified.
  verbose   If on, report interim progress messages to the client.
  addonly   If on, change commands can only create fields in entries,
               not modify them.
  nolog     If on, disable logging.
  external  If on, make Fields marked as "LocalPub" invisible.





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  Example

     C: set verbose=off
     S: 200:Done.

     C: set
     S: -200:echo:off
     S: -200:limit:2
     S: -200:charset:iso-8859-1
     S: -200:verbose:off
     S: -200:addonly:off
     S: -200:nolog:off
     S: -200:external:on
     S: 200:Done.

3.6.  login, logout, answer, clear, email, and xlogin

3.6.1.  login

  login [alias]

  The "login" command allows client users to identify themselves to the
  Nameserver. More specifically it identifies a client user with a
  particular entry in the Nameserver and allows them to change fields
  in that entry and possibly other entries.  It is also necessary to be
  logged in to the Nameserver to view certain sensitive fields in the
  user's own entry.

  In order to use the "login" command the client must prompt the user
  for their ph alias and password.  The client is then responsible for
  (optionally) encrypting the password and sending it to the server.
  This will be covered in sections 3.6.3 (answer) and 3.6.4 (clear).

     C: login foo
     S: 301:,:P"_Y$ONU%"SDUQ6&^`ZZ'?*#Y`A_.Z/A>?@SH>*-

3.6.2.  logout

  logout

  The "logout" command allows a user who is logged in to the Nameserver
  to logout.

     C: logout S: 200:Ok.







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3.6.3.  answer

  answer encrypted-response

  In response to the login command, the Nameserver responds with a
  random challenge string.  The Nameserver client encrypts the
  challenge with the password supplied by the user, uuencodes the
  result into US-ASCII, and returns the printable result in the
  "answer" command:

  C: login ppomes
  S: 301:.%$&.D^67$*1?<.2S@DR:Z@M*)AV-<:4QM>#R>M*HT
  C: answer M5K'F:NI(a?M?O2+-a9`48RA#ZF=L9)G)/XRS7Q^0>0@-R7X$WGb`50B]
  S: 200:ppomes:Hi how are you?

  The encryption algorithm is based on a three rotor Enigma engine.
  There are known attacks on the security of this approach.

  The answer command is also used to return method-specific responses
  to the xlogin command (section 3.6.6).

3.6.4.  clear

  clear cleartext-password

  The "clear" command can be used instead of the "answer" command to
  complete a login sequence.  It's argument is the user's cleartext
  password.  This command is supplied only to support those clients
  that have not implemented one of the encryption engines used by the
  "answer" command.  It's use is strongly discouraged.

     C: login ppomes
     S: 301:E=@Y&VW^_9YVI;D5.[EB0:B)9Z#_&X$:2)/eL$VJC87
     C: clear MySecret
     S: 200:ppomes:Hi how are you?

3.6.5.  email

  email local-userid

  The "email" command can also be used instead of the "answer" command
  to complete a login sequence.  The value of local-userid is the
  user's login name on the local machine.  If all of the following
  conditions are true, then the email command will be accepted by the
  server:






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  1) The connection to the server originates on port 1023 or less on
     the client.  Note: This is a system port.  Port 1023 is not
     allocated to this use.

  2) The canonical name of the client's host matches the right-hand
     side of the email address of the requested alias specified in the
     "login" command.

  3) The "local-userid" matches the left-hand side of the email
     address belonging to the requested alias.

  This is a weak but convenient form of authentication.  Depending on
  the information users are allowed to change about themselves and the
  threat environment the server operates in, this method may be
  appropriate.  Servers should take care to avoid DNS spoofing.

3.6.6.  xlogin

  xlogin option alias

  Extended login command for GSS, Kerberos v4 and v5, ANSI X9.9 token
  devices (e.g., SNK/4), etc. The option is one of the values returned
  in the Authenticate field of the "siteinfo" command (section 3.2).
  Alias is the user's alias.

     C: xlogin 16 ppomes
     S: 301:DoKrbLogin started; send Kerberos mutual authenticator.
     C: answer MJa8QO1cJHYz2IdWyg7uhAnixVqgCZQBWr64ciXYku1ktdu....
     S: 200:ppomes:Hi how are you?

     C: xlogin 4 ppomes
     S: 302:SNK Challenge "024142":
     C: answer 82344338
     S: 200:ppomes:Hi how are you?

  The answer command returns the requested quantity, Kerberos
  authenticator, X9.9 device response, etc.  Binary quantities are
  first uuencoded into US-ASCII.

3.7.  add

  add field=value...

  This command is used to add new entries to the database.  You must be
  logged in and have full Hero privileges (section 1.4) to use "add".

     C: add name="doe john" id="123456789" alias="j-doe"
     S: 200:Ok.



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3.8.  query

  query [field=]value [field=value] . . . [return field1 [field2]]

  If no field is specified together with a value then the field is
  assumed to be "name" and/or "nickname".  When more than one field-
  value specification are given in a query, entries matching all
  specifications are returned (implicit AND).

  It is possible to define which fields should be returned by adding a
  "return" clause.  If no return clause is defined the Ph server will
  return a default list of fields.  Typical default fields are "alias",
  "name", "title", "email", "phone", "address", "department", "www",
  and "other".  A return clause consists of the word "return" followed
  by a list of fields or the word "all".  If the word "all" is used
  then all viewable fields will be returned.

     C: query name=doe name=john
     S: 102:There was 1 match to your request.
     S: -200:1:            alias: j-doe
     S: -200:1:             name: doe john
     S: 200:Ok.

3.9.  delete

  delete [field=]value...

  This command is used to delete entire entries from the database.  You
  must be logged in and have full Hero (section 1.4) privileges to use
  "delete".

  The arguments to the "delete" command are the same as the selection
  part of a "query" command.  "Delete" finds all the entries that match
  the argument(s) and deletes them.

  The "delete" command obeys the Nameserver "limit" option, which can
  be used to prevent deletion of more entries than intended.

     C: delete name="doe john" id="123456789" alias="j-doe"
     S: 200:1 entries deleted.

3.10.  change

  change [field=]value    [make|force] field="value"...

  This command is used to change one or more fields in one or more
  entries to the values specified.  The "change" command consists of
  two clauses, the "change" clause and the "make" or "force" clause.



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  The "change" clause determines which entries will be affected by the
  command.  It uses the same arguments as the selection clause of a
  "query" command.  The "make" or "force" clause specifies which
  field(s) will be changed and the new value(s) of the specified
  field(s).  The "force" clause is only used to make non-encrypted
  changes to fields marked "Encrypt".

  You must be logged in to use "change".

  The "change" command obeys the Nameserver "limit" option, which can
  be used to prevent changing the field contents of more entries than
  intended.

     C: change alias=j-doe force password=NewSecret
     S: 200:1 entry changed.

     C: set limit=500
     S: 200:Done.
     C: change fax="(619) 555-1212" make fax="(760) 555-1212"
     S: 200: 113 entries changed.

3.11.  help

  help    [{native|client} [topic ...]]

  Prints help on the Nameserver or on specific clients.  If client is
  specified, it should be a valid Nameserver client identifier, such as
  "ph".  The client-specific help will first be searched for topic, and
  then the native help will be searched.  If topic is omitted, a list
  of all available help texts will be returned.  If "native" or client
  are also omitted, a list of clients will be returned.

C: help native 101
-200:1:101:
-200:1: The Nameserver echo option is set.  The text of this response is
-200:1: the command you just gave, which has not (yet) been executed.
200:Ok.

3.12.  quit/exit/stop

  quit

  Terminates the session with the Nameserver and causes the client to
  exit.

     C: quit
     S: 200:Bye!




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4.  Security

4.1.  Transport Layer

  In the absence of encryption between client and server, all
  Nameserver traffic is unsecure.  Kerberos v4, v5, and the GSS-API all
  provide encryption mechanisms, however the Nameserver protocol does
  not support the means to negotiate encryption between client and
  server.  This implies that all traffic can be seen by other machines
  having access to the network linking the client and server.
  Furthermore clear-text traffic is subject to modification in transit
  between client and server.  Possible ways of augmenting this would be
  to use something like TLS [TLS] or IPSec [IPSEC].

4.2.  Server Authentication

  Unless one of the mutual authentication mechanisms is used, e.g.,
  Kerberos 4/5 or GSS-API, there is no way to prove the identity of a
  server.  Further, there is no mechanism to prove a given server is
  authoritative for a set of information.

4.3.  Secure User Authentication

  The Ph protocol allows the negotiation of several authentication
  protocols between client and server, some weak and some strong.  It
  does not prohibit the use of cleartext passwords, something which
  should be depreciated, but is useful when dealing with some clients.

4.4.  Privacy and Access Lists

  Directory services like the CCSO white pages server that contain
  information on persons have to consider privacy issues.  This paper
  describes one way of partitioning specific attributes from unwanted
  access by designating them visible only to the "local" community,
  visible only to the person connected with the information, or visible
  only to the database administrator.















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4.5.  References

  [GSS-API] Linn, J., "Generic Security Service Application Program
            Interface, Version 2", RFC 2078, January 1997.

  [HMAC]    Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M., and R. Canetti, "HMAC: Keyed-
            Hashing for Message Authentication", RFC 2104, February
            1997.

  [IPSEC]   Atkinson, R., "Security Architecture for the Internet
            Protocol", RFC 1825, August 1995.

  [KRB5]    Kohl, J., and C. Neuman, "The Kerberos Network
            Authentication Service (V5)", RFC 1510, September 1993.

  [TLS]     Dierks, T., and C. Allen, "The TLS Protocol,
            Version 1.0", Work in Progress.

  [MIME]    Freed, N., and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
            Extensions, (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message
            Bodies", RFC 2045, November 1996.

5.  Miscellaneous

5.1.  Authors' Addresses

  Roland Hedberg
  Umdac
  Umea University
  901 87 Umea
  Sweden

  EMail: [email protected]


  Paul Pomes
  Qualcomm Inc
  6455 Lusk Blvd
  San Diego, CA
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]









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Appendix A

  Default fields and suggested lengths connected to different object
  types.

  All entries:  Information common to all entries
  type              64
  name              256
  address           128
  proxy             32
  password          32

  type=phone:   Information found in a phonebook
  phone             64
  fax               64

  type=person:  Information about a human being
  alias             32
  forename          64
  surname           64
  group             32
  email             128
  public_key        4096
  nickname          128
  www               256
  acl               128

  type=staff:   Information about an employee
  empno             16
  department        64
  supervisor        64
  secretary         64
  office_location   128
  office_address    128
  office_phone      64
  title             64
  pager             64
  hours             128

  type=unit:   Information about an organizational unit
  email             128
  www               256
  public_key        4096








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Appendix B

  Result codes

  100 In progress (general).
  101 Echo of current command.
  102 Count of number of matches to query.
  103 No hostname found for IP address.
  200 Success (general).
  201 Database ready, but read-only.
  300 More information (general).
  301 Encrypt this string.
  302 Print this prompt.
  400 Temporary error (general).
  401 Internal database error.
  402 Lock not obtained within timeout period.
  403 Login would have been OK, but database read-only
  475 Database unavailable; try later.
  500 Permanent error (general).
  501 No matches to query.
  502 Too many matches to query.
  503 Not authorized for requested information.
  504 Not authorized for requested search criteria.
  505 Not authorized to change requested field.
  506 Request refused; must be logged in to execute.
  507 Field does not exist.
  508 Field is not present in requested entry.
  509 Alias already in use.
  510 Not authorized to change this entry.
  511 Not authorized to add entries.
  512 Illegal value.
  513 Unknown option.
  514 Unknown command.
  515 No indexed field in query.
  516 No authorization for request.
  517 Operation failed because database is read-only.
  518 To many entries selected by change command.
  520 CPU usage limit exceeded.
  521 Change command would have overridden existing field,
  and the "addonly" option is on.
  522 Attempt to view "Encrypted" field.
  523 Expecting "answer" or "clear".
  524 Names of help topics may not contain "/".
  525 Email authentication failed
  526 Host name address not found in DNS
  527 Reverse DNS lookup does not match forward DNS lookup
  528 General Kerberos database error.
  529 Selected authentication method not available



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  590 Remote queries not allowed.
  598 Command unknown.
  599 Syntax error.
  600 Ambiguous or multiple match















































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Appendix  C

  Description of the client command language using the augmented
  Backus-Naur Form (RFC822).

  response = code [index] [field] text CRLF

  code     = [-] LDIG 2DIGIT ":"
  index    = number ":"
  field    = 1*SPACE attribute ":" 1*SPACE
  text     = 1*( CHAR / LWSP-char )


  command     = ph-command CRLF

  ph-command  =  "status" / a-command / oa-command
  ph-command  =/ av-command / answer-command / query-command
  ph-command  =/ delete-command / change-command / "help" / quit-command

  a-command       = ("siteinfo"/"fields"/"id"/"login"/"help"/"email"/
             "clear") [attribute]
  oa-command      = ("xlogin") number attribute
  av-command      = ("set"/"add"/"make") 1*attribute-value
  answer-command  = ("answer") 1*printable
  query-command   = ("query"/"ph") 1*selection ["return" 1*attribute]
  quit-command    = "quit" / "exit" / "stop"
  change-command  = "change" 1*selection make 1*attribute-value
  delete-command  = "delete" selection

  selection       = value / attribute-value

  attribute-value = attribute "=" value

  value           = 1*(cstring / quoted-string / set)

  cstring         = 1*( ALPHA / DIGIT / S_SPEC / set / quoted-pair )
  attribute       = 1*( ALPHA / DIGIT / "_" / "-" )
  number          = 1*(DIGIT)

  quoted-string   = <"> 1*(qtext/quoted-pair) <">

  quoted-pair  =  "\" CHAR
  qtext        = 1*( CHAR / CR / SPEC1 / DELIMIT1 / DELIMIT2 / LWS )
  set          = '[' 1*(ALPHA/DIGIT) ']'

  LWSP-char    = SPACE / HTAB
  LWS          = 1*([CRLF] (LWSP-char))
  CRLF         = CR LF



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  S_SPEC       = '*'/'+'/'?'
  SPEC1        = "=" / "*" / "?" / "+" / "[" / "]"
  SPEC2        = "\" / """
  DELIMIT1     = SPACE / HTAB / LF
  DELIMIT2     = "," / ";" / ":"
  PRINTABLE    = %d32..%d126
  CTL          = %d0..%d31 / %d127..%d160
  ALPHA        = %d65..%d90 / %d97..%d122
  DIGIT        = %d48..%d57
  LDIG         = %d49..%d54
  SPACE        = %d32
  SEP          = (CR LF) / LF
  CR           = %d13
  LF           = %d10
  HTAB         = %d9
  CHAR         = %d33..%d126 / %d160..%d255
  OTHER        = "(" / ")" / "-" / "." / "/"
         "@" / "$" / "_" / "!" / "~" /
         "'" / "#" / "&" / "<" / ">" /
         "^" / "`" / "{" / "|" / "}"































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Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
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  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
  BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
























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