Network Working Group                                          L. Daigle
Request for Comments: 2968                                      T. Eklof
Category: Informational                                     October 2000


          Mesh of Multiple DAG servers - Results from TISDAG

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 (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  The Common Indexing Protocol ([CIP1]) is designed to facilitate the
  creation not only of query referral indexes, but also of meshes of
  (loosely) affiliated referral indexes.  The purpose of such a mesh of
  servers is to implement some kind of distributed sharing of indexing
  and/or searching tasks across different servers.  So far, the TISDAG
  (Technical Infrastructure for Swedish Directory Access Gateways)
  project ([TISDAG], [DAGEXP]) has focused on creating a single
  referral index; the obvious next step is to integrate that into a
  larger set of interoperating services.

1. Introduction

1.1 Overview of mesh possibilities

  Two different possibilities are possible for extending the TISDAG
  service to a mesh model (or some combination of both).  First, it
  should be possible to create a mesh of DAG-based services.  Or, it
  might be interesting to use the mesh architecture to incorporate
  access to other types of services (e.g., the Norwegian Directory of
  Directories).  In either case, the basic principle for establishing a
  mesh is that interoperating services should exchange index objects,
  according to the architecture of the mesh (e.g., hierarchical, or
  graph-like, preferably without loops!).

  As is outlined in the CIP documentation ([CIP1]), many possibilities
  exist for mechanisms for creating indexes over multiple referral
  servers -- for example, WDSP index objects could be passed along





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  untouched, or a referral index server's contents could be aggregated
  into a new index object, generating referrals back to that server.

  The proposal is that the mesh should be constructed using index
  objects aggregated over participating services' servers.  That is,
  referrals will be generated to other recognized services, not their
  individual participants.  This can be done as a hierarchy or a level
  mesh one-layer deep, but the important reason for not simply passing
  forward index objects (unaggregated) is that individual services may
  support different ranges of access protocols, have particular
  security requirements, etc.  Referrals should be directed to a CAP or
  CAPs -- either the standard ones used by the DAG system, or new ones
  established to support particular semantics of remote systems (e.g.,
  other query types, etc).  Within a given DAG system,  referrals to
  these remote servers will look just like any other referral, although
  a particular SAP or SAPs may be established to provide query
  fulfillment (again, to enable translations between variations of
  service, to allow secure access if the relationship between the
  services is restricted, etc).

  In the following scenarios of mesh traversal, the assumption is that
  the primary service in discussion (Country A in Scenario 1, Country B
  in Scenario 2) is a DAG-based service.  The scenarios are presented
  in the light of interoperating DAG services, but in most cases it
  would be equally applicable if the remote service was provided by
  some other service architecture.  Again, the key element for
  establishing a mesh of any sort is the exchange of the CIP index
  object, not internal system architecture.

1.1.1  Scenario 1:  Top Down

  Suppose 2 countries tie their services together.  A user makes a
  query in Country A.  A certain number of hits are made against the
  index objects of A's WDSPs.  There is also a hit in the aggregate
  index of Country B.  There are 3 possible cases under which this must
  be handled:

  Case 1:

  Country A and Country B are running services that are essentially the
  same -- in terms of protocols, queries, and schema that are
  supported.  In this case, one referral should be generated per
  protocol supported by Country B's service.  The referral can be
  passed back as far as the client, if its protocol supports referrals.
  Alternatively, the CAP may chain the referral through an appropriate
  SAP, in the usual fashion.  In other words, the CAPs of Country B's
  service act as WDSPs to Country A's service.




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  Consider the following illustration (only relevant CAPs, SAPs, etc,
  are shown; others suppressed for lack of room):

            +-----------------+
       (1)  |-----+ Country A |     +-------+
     ------>|Prot1|   DAG     |     |A-WSDP1|
     <------| CAP |     +-----|     | Prot1 |
       (2)  |-----+     |Prot1|     +-------+
            |           | SAP |
     ----+  |           +-----|     +-------+
      (3)|  |    +-------+    |     |A-WDSP2|
         |  |    | RI-A  |    |     | Prot1 |
         |  +-----------------+     +-------+
         |
         |                          +-------+
         |                          |A-WDSP3|
         |                          | Prot2 |
         +----------------+         +-------+
                          |          [...]
                          |
                          |         +-----------------+
                          |         |-----+ Country B |     +-------+
                          +-------->|Prot1|   DAG     |     |B-WSDP1|
                                    | CAP |     +-----|     | Prot2 |
                                    |-----+     |Prot1|     +-------+
                                    |           | SAP |
                                    |           +-----|     +-------+
                                    |    +-------+    |     |B-WDSP2|
                                    |    | RI-B  |    |     | Prot1 |
                                    +-----------------+     +-------+
                                                             [...]

  where
     Prot[i] is some particular query protocol
     RI-A has an index over all A-WDSP[i] and RI-B
     RI-B has an index over all B-WDSP[i]
     (1) is the query to the Country A DAG system, which
         yields a referral based on the index object from RI-B
     (2) is that referral
     (3) is the resolution of that referral, which the client takes
         to the Country B DAG system directly (to find out which, if
         any, B-WDSP[i] have relevant information)









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  Case 2:

  Country A and Country B are running services that address the same
  service type (e.g., whitepages), but are not using an identical
  collection of protocols, allowed queries, or schema.  The index
  object that Country B sent to Country A's DAG service must be
  constructed in terms of Country A's service, in order for appropriate
  hits to be generated against the index object (i.e. for referrals to
  Country B's service).  However, to resolve the referral, it will be
  necessary to do some further protocol/schema/query mapping.  This can
  be done by a special SAP established within Country A's service, that
  maps Country A's service into the published service of Country B.
  Country A may then elect to support only one of Country B's access
  protocols, and the designated SAP will always contact one type of CAP
  at Country B.

  Alternatively, Country B can establish a particular CAP that does the
  mapping from Country A's service into something that is most
  appropriate against the internal structure of its service.  In this
  case, Country A's referral will be to a special CAP in Country B's
  service (which, again, will look like a WDSP to the Country A
  service); in fact, the referral may be handled directly by the client
  software.  The difference between the two possible approaches lies in
  the responsibility of managing the relationship between the 2 service
  types.  On the one hand, Country A could handle it if it knows its
  service as well as the published access to Country B. On the other,
  Country B could be responsible for establishing a CAP for every
  country that may want to connect to it.  The latter can, in some
  cases, be justified by the amount of internal optimization that can
  be done, and because it reduces the overhead for Country A's service
  (can pass the referral directly back to the client software).

  Consider the following illustration (only relevant CAPs, SAPs, etc,
  are shown; others suppressed for lack of room):

















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            +-----------------+
       (1)  |-----+ Country A |     +-------+
     ------>|Prot1|   DAG     |     |A-WSDP1|
     <------| CAP |     +-----|     | Prot1 |
       (2)  |-----+     |Prot1|     +-------+
            |           | SAP |
     ----+  |           +-----|     +-------+
      (3)|  |    +-------+    |     |A-WDSP2|
         |  |    | RI-A  |    |     | Prot1 |
         |  +-----------------+     +-------+
         |
         |                          +-------+
         |                          |A-WDSP3|
         |                          | Prot2 |
         +----------------+         +-------+
                          |          [...]
                          |
                          |         +-----------------+
                          |         |-----+ Country B |     +-------+
                          |         |Prot3|   DAG     |     |B-WSDP1|
                          |         | CAP |     +-----|     | Prot3 |
                          |         |-----+     |Prot3|     +-------+
                          |         |---------+ | SAP |
                          |         |Country A| +-----|
                          +-------->|CAP:Prot1|       |
                                    |---------+       |     +-------+
                                    |    +-------+    |     |B-WDSP2|
                                    |    | RI-B  |    |     | Prot3 |
                                    +-----------------+     +-------+
                                                             [...]

  where
     Prot[i] is some particular query protocol
     RI-A has an index over all A-WDSP[i] and RI-B
     RI-B has an index over all B-WDSP[i]
     (1) is the query to the Country A DAG system, which
         yields a referral based on the index object from RI-B
     (2) is that referral
     (3) is the resolution of that referral, which the client takes
         to the Country B DAG system directly, but to a CAP that
         is specifically designed to accommodate protocols from
         Country A's service, and map it (and schema) into Country
         B's service.  Likely, all Country B referrals will be
         chained for the Country A client







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  Case 3:

  The third possibility is, in fact, a refinement of the first.  If
  Country A and Country B are running services that are every way
  identical except for the data (WDSPs covered), then it may make sense
  to NOT aggregate Country B's WDSP index objects, but to copy them to
  Country A's server.  Then, Country A's CAPs might be given access to
  the SAPs of Country B in order to carry out chaining directly at the
  remote service (instead of implicating Country A's SAPs and Country
  B's CAPs, as in the first example above).  The answer does not come
  from technology -- it depends entirely on the nature of the
  relationship that can be established between Country A and Country
  B's services.

1.1.2  Scenario 2:  Working Up

  The above scenario implicitly assumes that Country A's server had
  received index objects from Country B's server.  This will be the
  case if Country A's server is higher in the levels of a hierarchy of
  services (established by agreements between the service operators),
  or if the network is comprised of servers that share their index
  objects with all others, for example.  In the latter case, searching
  at any one of the servers in the service yields the full range of
  results -- referrals will be made to any other server that might have
  data that fulfills the user's query.  The sharing of the index
  objects is a mechanism to allow each server to manage local data,
  while enabling distributed load-sharing on the basic query handling.

  However, if a hierarchical, or at least not-completely-connected
  model is used for the server network, queries carried out at a level
  other than the top of the hierarchy, or in one particular branch of
  the hierarchy, will not actually be matched against all index
  objects.  Therefore, there may be other servers to which the query
  should be directed if the full space needs to be searched. Suppose,
  for example, that in the above example Country B is in fact lower in
  the hierarchy than Country A.  A user sending a query to Country B's
  service may be content to limit the scope of the query to that
  country's information (this is true in enough real-life situations
  that this hierarchical relationship becomes an effective mechanism
  for scoping queries and avoiding having to flood the entire network
  with every single query or keep full copies of all data in every
  server).

  Still in theoretical stages, the DAG/IP provides control constructs
  to allow DAG components to act according to the topology of the mesh.
  A CAP might use the "polled-by" system command to establish what
  other servers in the mesh exist in higher levels (and therefore would
  be worth contacting if the scope of the search is to be increased).



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  In the example above, a CAP in Country B's system could determine
  that Country A's service was polling Country B, and therefore make it
  a logical target for expanding the scope of the query.  More
  experience (primarily with server mesh topologies) is necessary
  before it will be clear how to best make use of these capabilities:

      .  should the CAP always broaden the scope? only if there are no
         local referrals? under user direction?
      .  should the CAP use a local SAP to contact the remote service's
         CAP?
      .  is it better to completely connect the mesh of servers, or
         produce some kind of hierarchy?
      .  etc

2. Other considerations

  Depending on the context in which a mesh is established (e.g.,
  between national white pages services, or different units of a
  corporate organization, etc), it may be useful to allow individual
  WDSPs to indicate whether they are willing to have their data
  included in a DAG system's aggregated index object (i.e., allowing
  the DAG system to receive referrals from other systems in the mesh).

3. Security Considerations

  This document describes different configurations for sharing
  information between information services.  It introduces no security
  considerations beyond those attendant in (and addressed by)
  particular directory service access protocols.

4. Acknowledgements

  The work described in this document was carried out as part of an on-
  going project of Ericsson.  For further information regarding that
  project, contact:

     Bjorn Larsson
     [email protected]













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5. Authors' Addresses

  Leslie L. Daigle
  Thinking Cat Enterprises

  EMail:  [email protected]


  Thommy Eklof
  Hotsip AB

  EMail: [email protected]

6. References

  Request For Comments (RFC) and Internet Draft documents are available
  from numerous mirror sites.

  [CIP1]   Allen, J. and M. Mealling, "The Architecture of the Common
           Indexing Protocol (CIP)", RFC 2651, August 1999.

  [TISDAG] Daigle, L. and R. Hedberg "Technical Infrastructure for
           Swedish Directory Access Gateways (TISDAG)," RFC 2967,
           October 2000.

  [DAGEXP] Eklof, T. and L. Daigle, "Wide Area Directory Deployment
           Experiences", RFC 2969, October 2000.

  [NDD]    Hedberg, R. and H. Alvestrand, "Technical Specification, The
           Norwegian Directory of Directories (NDD)", Work in Progress.





















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Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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