Network Working Group                                            Y. Snir
Request for Comments: 3644                                    Y. Ramberg
Category: Standards Track                                  Cisco Systems
                                                           J. Strassner
                                                             Intelliden
                                                               R. Cohen
                                                              Ntear LLC
                                                               B. Moore
                                                                    IBM
                                                          November 2003


          Policy Quality of Service (QoS) Information Model

Status of this Memo

  This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
  Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
  Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
  and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This document presents an object-oriented information model for
  representing Quality of Service (QoS) network management policies.
  This document is based on the IETF Policy Core Information Model and
  its extensions.  It defines an information model for QoS enforcement
  for differentiated and integrated services using policy.  It is
  important to note that this document defines an information model,
  which by definition is independent of any particular data storage
  mechanism and access protocol.















Snir, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


Table of Contents

  1.   Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
       1.1.  The Process of QoS Policy Definition. . . . . . . . . .  5
       1.2.  Design Goals and Their Ramifications. . . . . . . . . .  8
             1.2.1.  Policy-Definition Oriented. . . . . . . . . . .  8
                     1.2.1.1.  Rule-based Modeling . . . . . . . . .  9
                     1.2.1.2.  Organize Information Hierarchically .  9
                     1.2.1.3.  Goal-Oriented Policy Definition . . . 10
             1.2.2. Policy Domain Model. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
                     1.2.2.1.  Model QoS Policy in a Device- and
                               Vendor-Independent Manner . . . . . . 11
                     1.2.2.2.  Use Roles for Mapping Policy to
                               Network Devices . . . . . . . . . . . 11
                     1.2.2.3.  Reusability . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
             1.2.3.  Enforceable Policy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
             1.2.4.  QPIM Covers Both Signaled And Provisioned QoS . 14
             1.2.5.  Interoperability for PDPs and Management
                     Applications. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
       1.3.  Modeling Abstract QoS Policies. . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
       1.4.  Rule Hierarchy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
             1.4.1.  Use of Hierarchy Within Bandwidth Allocation
                     Policies. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
             1.4.2.  Use of Rule Hierarchy to Describe Drop
                     Threshold Policies. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
             1.4.3.  Restrictions of the Use of Hierarchy Within
                     QPIM. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
       1.5.  Intended Audiences. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
  2.   Class Hierarchies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
       2.1.  Inheritance Hierarchy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
       2.2.  Relationship Hierarchy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
  3.   QoS Actions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
       3.1.  Overview. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
       3.2.  RSVP Policy Actions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
             3.2.1.  Example: Controlling COPS Stateless Decision. . 28
             3.2.2.  Example: Controlling the COPS Replace Decision. 29
       3.3.  Provisioning Policy Actions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
             3.3.1.  Admission Actions: Controlling Policers and
                     Shapers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
             3.3.2.  Controlling Markers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
             3.3.3.  Controlling Edge Policies - Examples. . . . . . 33
       3.4.  Per-Hop Behavior Actions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
             3.4.1.  Controlling Bandwidth and Delay . . . . . . . . 35
             3.4.2.  Congestion Control Actions. . . . . . . . . . . 35
             3.4.3.  Using Hierarchical Policies: Examples for PHB
                     Actions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
  4.   Traffic Profiles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
       4.1.  Provisioning Traffic Profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


       4.2.  RSVP Traffic Profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
  5.   Pre-Defined QoS-Related Variables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
  6.   QoS Related Values. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
  7.   Class Definitions: Association Hierarchy. . . . . . . . . . . 44
       7.1.  The Association "QoSPolicyTrfcProfInAdmissionAction". . 44
             7.1.1.  The Reference "Antecedent". . . . . . . . . . . 44
             7.1.2.  The Reference "Dependent" . . . . . . . . . . . 44
       7.2.  The Association "PolicyConformAction" . . . . . . . . . 44
             7.2.1.  The Reference "Antecedent". . . . . . . . . . . 45
             7.2.2.  The Reference "Dependent" . . . . . . . . . . . 45
       7.3.  The Association "QoSPolicyExceedAction" . . . . . . . . 45
             7.3.1.  The Reference "Antecedent". . . . . . . . . . . 46
             7.3.2.  The Reference "Dependent" . . . . . . . . . . . 46
       7.4.  The Association "PolicyViolateAction" . . . . . . . . . 46
             7.4.1.  The Reference "Antecedent". . . . . . . . . . . 46
             7.4.2.  The Reference "Dependent" . . . . . . . . . . . 47
       7.5   The Aggregation
             "QoSPolicyRSVPVariableInRSVPSimplePolicyAction" . . . . 47
             7.5.1.  The Reference "GroupComponent". . . . . . . . . 47
             7.5.2.  The Reference "PartComponent" . . . . . . . . . 47
  8.   Class Definitions: Inheritance Hierarchy. . . . . . . . . . . 48
       8.1.  The Class QoSPolicyDiscardAction. . . . . . . . . . . . 48
       8.2.  The Class QoSPolicyAdmissionAction. . . . . . . . . . . 48
             8.2.1.  The Property qpAdmissionScope . . . . . . . . . 48
       8.3.  The Class QoSPolicyPoliceAction . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
       8.4.  The Class QoSPolicyShapeAction. . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
       8.5.  The Class QoSPolicyRSVPAdmissionAction. . . . . . . . . 50
             8.5.1.  The Property qpRSVPWarnOnly . . . . . . . . . . 50
             8.5.2.  The Property qpRSVPMaxSessions. . . . . . . . . 51
       8.6.  The Class QoSPolicyPHBAction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
             8.6.1.  The Property qpMaxPacketSize. . . . . . . . . . 51
       8.7.  The Class QoSPolicyBandwidthAction. . . . . . . . . . . 52
             8.7.1.  The Property qpForwardingPriority . . . . . . . 52
             8.7.2.  The Property qpBandwidthUnits . . . . . . . . . 52
             8.7.3.  The Property qpMinBandwidth . . . . . . . . . . 53
             8.7.4.  The Property qpMaxBandwidth . . . . . . . . . . 53
             8.7.5.  The Property qpMaxDelay . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
             8.7.6.  The Property qpMaxJitter. . . . . . . . . . . . 53
             8.7.7.  The Property qpFairness . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
       8.8.  The Class QoSPolicyCongestionControlAction. . . . . . . 54
             8.8.1.  The Property qpQueueSizeUnits . . . . . . . . . 54
             8.8.2.  The Property qpQueueSize. . . . . . . . . . . . 55
             8.8.3.  The Property qpDropMethod . . . . . . . . . . . 55
             8.8.4.  The Property qpDropThresholdUnits . . . . . . . 55
             8.8.5.  The Property qpDropMinThresholdValue. . . . . . 55
             8.8.6.  The Property qpDropMaxThresholdValue. . . . . . 56
       8.9.  The Class QoSPolicyTrfcProf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
       8.10. The Class QoSPolicyTokenBucketTrfcProf. . . . . . . . . 57



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


             8.10.1. The Property qpTBRate . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
             8.10.2. The Property qpTBNormalBurst. . . . . . . . . . 57
             8.10.3. The Property qpTBExcessBurst. . . . . . . . . . 57
       8.11. The Class QoSPolicyIntServTrfcProf. . . . . . . . . . . 57
             8.11.1. The Property qpISTokenRate. . . . . . . . . . . 58
             8.11.2. The Property qpISPeakRate . . . . . . . . . . . 58
             8.11.3. The Property qpISBucketSize . . . . . . . . . . 58
             8.11.4. The Property qpISResvRate . . . . . . . . . . . 58
             8.11.5. The Property qpISResvSlack. . . . . . . . . . . 59
             8.11.6. The Property qpISMinPolicedUnit . . . . . . . . 59
             8.11.7. The Property qpISMaxPktSize . . . . . . . . . . 59
       8.12. The Class QoSPolicyAttributeValue . . . . . . . . . . . 59
             8.12.1. The Property qpAttributeName. . . . . . . . . . 60
             8.12.2. The Property qpAttributeValueList . . . . . . . 60
       8.13. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPVariable . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
       8.14. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPSourceIPv4Variable . . . . . . . 61
       8.15. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationIPv4Variable. . . . . 61
       8.16. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPSourceIPv6Variable . . . . . . . 62
       8.17. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationIPv6Variable. . . . . 62
       8.18. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPSourcePortVariable . . . . . . . 62
       8.19. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationPortVariable. . . . . 63
       8.20. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPIPProtocolVariable . . . . . . . 63
       8.21. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPIPVersionVariable. . . . . . . . 63
       8.22. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPDCLASSVariable . . . . . . . . . 64
       8.23. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPStyleVariable. . . . . . . . . . 64
       8.24. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPIntServVariable. . . . . . . . . 65
       8.25. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPMessageTypeVariable. . . . . . . 65
       8.26. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPPreemptionPriorityVariable . . . 65
       8.27. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPPreemptionDefPriorityVariable. . 66
       8.28. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPUserVariable . . . . . . . . . . 66
       8.29. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPApplicationVariable. . . . . . . 66
       8.30. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPAuthMethodVariable . . . . . . . 67
       8.31. The Class QosPolicyDNValue. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
             8.31.1. The Property qpDNList . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
       8.32. The Class QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction . . . . . . . . . . 68
             8.32.1. The Property qpRSVPActionType . . . . . . . . . 68
  9.   Intellectual Property Rights Statement. . . . . . . . . . . . 69
  10.  Acknowledgements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
  11.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
  12.  References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
       12.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
       12.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
  13.  Authors' Addresses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
  14.  Full Copyright Statement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73







Snir, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


1.  Introduction

  The QoS Policy Information Model (QPIM) establishes a standard
  framework and constructs for specifying and representing policies
  that administer, manage, and control access to network QoS resources.
  Such policies will be referred to as "QoS policies" in this document.
  The framework consists of a set of classes and relationships that are
  organized in an object-oriented information model.  It is agnostic of
  any specific Policy Decision Point (PDP) or Policy Enforcement Point
  (PEP) (see [TERMS] for definitions) implementation, and independent
  of any particular QoS implementation mechanism.

  QPIM is designed to represent QoS policy information for large-scale
  policy domains (the term "policy domain" is defined in [TERMS]).  A
  primary goal of this information model is to assist human
  administrators in their definition of policies to control QoS
  resources (as opposed to individual network element configuration).
  The process of creating QPIM data instances is fed by business rules,
  network topology and QoS methodology (e.g., Differentiated Services).

  This document is based on the IETF Policy Core Information Model and
  its extensions as specified by [PCIM] and [PCIMe].  QPIM builds upon
  these two documents to define an information model for QoS
  enforcement for differentiated and integrated services ([DIFFSERV]
  and [INTSERV], respectively) using policy.  It is important to note
  that this document defines an information model, which by definition
  is independent of any particular data storage mechanism and access
  protocol.  This enables various data models (e.g., directory
  schemata, relational database schemata, and SNMP MIBs) to be designed
  and implemented according to a single uniform model.

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14, RFC 2119
  [KEYWORDS].

1.1.  The Process of QoS Policy Definition

  This section describes the process of using QPIM for the definition
  QoS policy for a policy domain.  Figure 1 illustrates information
  flow and not the actual procedure, which has several loops and
  feedback not depicted.









Snir, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


   ----------        ----------       -----------
  | Business |      | Topology |     |   QoS     |
  | Policy   |      |          |     |Methodology|
   ----------        ----------       -----------
       |                  |               |
       |                  |               |
       ------------------------------------
                          |
                          V
                   ---------------
                  |  QPIM/PCIM(e) |
                  |   modeling    |
                   ---------------
                          |
                          |            --------------
                          |<----------| Device info, |
                          |           | capabilities |
                          |            --------------
                          V
                   (---------------)
                   (    device     )---)
                   ( configuration )   )---)
                   (---------------)   )   )
                        (--------------)   )
                             (-------------)

              Figure 1: The QoS definition information flow

  The process of QoS policy definition is dependent on three types of
  information: the topology of the network devices under management,
  the particular type of QoS methodology used (e.g., DiffServ) and the
  business rules and requirements for specifying service(s) [TERMS]
  delivered by the network.  Both topology and business rules are
  outside the scope of QPIM.  However, important facets of both must be
  known and understood for correctly specifying the QoS policy.

  Typically, the process of QoS policy definition relies on a
  methodology based on one or more QoS methodologies.  For example, the
  DiffServ methodology may be employed in the QoS policy definition
  process.

  The topology of the network consists of an inventory of the network
  elements that make up the network and the set of paths that traffic
  may take through the network.  For example, a network administrator
  may decide to use the DiffServ architectural model [DIFFSERV] and
  classify network devices using the roles "boundary" and "core" (see
  [TERMS] for a definition of role, and [PCIM] for an explanation of




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  how they are used in the policy framework).  While this is not a
  complete topological view of the network, many times it may suffice
  for the purpose of QoS policy definition.

  Business rules are informal sets of requirements for specifying the
  behavior of various types of traffic that may traverse the network.
  For example, the administrator may be instructed to implement policy
  such that VoIP traffic manifests behavior that is similar to legacy
  voice traffic over telephone networks.  Note that this business rule
  (indirectly) prescribes specific behavior for this traffic type
  (VoIP), for example in terms of minimal delay, jitter and loss.
  Other traffic types, such as WEB buying transactions, system backup
  traffic, video streaming, etc., will express their traffic
  conditioning requirements in different terms.  Again, this
  information is required not by QPIM itself, but by the overall policy
  management system that uses QPIM.  QPIM is used to help map the
  business rules into a form that defines the requirements for
  conditioning different types of traffic in the network.

  The topology, QoS methodology, and business rules are necessary
  prerequisites for defining traffic conditioning.  QPIM enables a set
  of tools for specifying traffic conditioning policy in a standard
  manner.  Using a standard QoS policy information model such as QPIM
  is needed also because different devices can have markedly different
  capabilities.  Even the same model of equipment can have different
  functionality if the network operating system and software running in
  those devices is different.  Therefore, a means is required to
  specify functionality in a standard way that is independent of the
  capabilities of different vendors' devices.  This is the role of
  QPIM.

  In a typical scenario, the administrator would first determine the
  role(s) that each interface of each network element plays in the
  overall network topology.  These roles define the functions supplied
  by a given network element independent of vendor and device type.
  The [PCIM] and [PCIMe] documents define the concept of a role.  Roles
  can be used to identify what parts of the network need which type of
  traffic conditioning.  For example, network interface cards that are
  categorized as "core" interfaces can be assigned the role name
  "core-interface".  This enables the administrator to design policies
  to configure all interfaces having the role "core-interface"
  independent of the actual physical devices themselves.  QPIM uses
  roles to help the administrator map a given set of devices or
  interfaces to a given set of policy constructs.







Snir, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  The policy constructs define the functionality required to perform
  the desired traffic conditioning for particular traffic type(s).  The
  functions themselves depend on the particular type of networking
  technologies chosen.  For example, the DiffServ methodology
  encourages us to aggregate similar types of traffic by assigning to
  each traffic class a particular per-hop forwarding behavior on each
  node.  RSVP enables bandwidth to be reserved.  These two
  methodologies can be used separately or in conjunction, as defined by
  the appropriate business policy.  QPIM provides specific classes to
  enable DiffServ and RSVP conditioning to be modeled.

  The QPIM class definitions are used to create instances of various
  policy constructs such as QoS actions and conditions that may be
  hierarchically organized in rules and groups (PolicyGroup and
  PolicyRule as defined in [PCIM] and [PCIMe]).  Examples of policy
  actions are rate limiting, jitter control and bandwidth allocation.
  Policy conditions are constructs that can select traffic according to
  a complex Boolean expression.

  A hierarchical organization was chosen for two reasons.  First, it
  best reflects the way humans tend to think about complex policy.
  Second, it enables policy to be easily mapped onto administrative
  organizations, as the hierarchical organization of policy mirrors
  most administrative organizations.  It is important to note that the
  policy definition process described here is done independent of any
  specific device capabilities and configuration options.  The policy
  definition is completely independent from the details of the
  implementation and the configuration interface of individual network
  elements, as well as of the mechanisms that a network element can use
  to condition traffic.

1.2.  Design Goals and Their Ramifications

  This section explains the QPIM design goals and how these goals are
  addressed in this document.  This section also describes the
  ramifications of the design goals and the design decisions made in
  developing QPIM.

1.2.1.  Policy-Definition Oriented

  The primary design goal of QPIM is to model policies controlling QoS
  behavior in a way that as closely as possible reflects the way humans
  tend to think about policy.  Therefore, QPIM is designed to address
  the needs of policy definition and management, and not device/network
  configuration.






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  There are several ramifications of this design goal.  First, QPIM
  uses rules to define policies, based on [PCIM] and [PCIMe].  Second,
  QPIM uses hierarchical organizations of policies and policy
  information extensively.  Third, QPIM does not force the policy
  writer to specify all implementation details; rather, it assumes that
  configuration agents (PDPs) interpret the policies and match them to
  suit the needs of device-specific configurations.

1.2.1.1.  Rule-based Modeling

  Policy is best described using rule-based modeling as explained and
  described in [PCIM] and [PCIMe].  A QoS policy rule is structured as
  a condition clause and an action clause.  The semantics are simple:
  if the condition clause evaluates to TRUE, then a set of QoS actions
  (specified in the action clause) can be executed.  For example, the
  rule:

     "WEB traffic should receive at least 50% of the available
     bandwidth resources or more, when more is available"

  can be formalized as:

     "<If protocol == HTTP> then <minimum BW = 50%>"

  where the first angle bracketed clause is a traffic condition and the
  second angle bracketed clause is a QoS action.

  This approach differs from data path modeling that describes the
  mechanisms that operates on the packet flows to achieve the desired
  effect.

  Note that the approach taken in QPIM specifically did NOT subclass
  the PolicyRule class.  Rather, it uses the SimplePolicyCondition,
  CompoundPolicyCondition, SimplePolicyAction, and CompoundPolicyAction
  classes defined in [PCIMe], as well as defining subclasses of the
  following classes: Policy, PolicyAction, SimplePolicyAction,
  PolicyImplicitVariable, and PolicyValue.  Subclassing the PolicyRule
  class would have made it more difficult to combine actions and
  conditions defined within different functional domains [PCIMe] within
  the same rules.

1.2.1.2.  Organize Information Hierarchically

  The organization of the information represented by QPIM is designed
  to be hierarchical.  To do this, QPIM utilizes the PolicySetComponent
  aggregation [PCIMe] to provide an arbitrarily nested organization of
  policy information.  A policy group functions as a container of




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  policy rules and/or policy groups.  A policy rule can also contain
  policy rules and/or groups, enabling a rule/sub-rule relationship to
  be realized.

  The hierarchical design decision is based on the realization that it
  is natural for humans to organize policy rules in groups.  Breaking
  down a complex policy into a set of simple rules is a process that
  follows the way people tend to think and analyze systems.  The
  complexity of the abstract, business-oriented policy is simplified
  and made into a hierarchy of simple rules and grouping of simple
  rules.

  The hierarchical information organization helps to simplify the
  definition and readability of data instances based on QPIM.
  Hierarchies can also serve to carry additional semantics for QoS
  actions in a given context.  An example, detailed in section 2.3,
  demonstrates how hierarchical bandwidth allocation policies can be
  specified in an intuitive form, without the need to specify complex
  scheduler structures.

1.2.1.3.  Goal-Oriented Policy Definition

  QPIM facilitates goal-oriented QoS policy definition.  This means
  that the process of defining QoS policy is focused on the desired
  effect of policies, as opposed to the means of implementing the
  policy on network elements.

  QPIM is intended to define a minimal specification of desired network
  behavior.  It is the role of device-specific configuration agents to
  interpret policy expressed in a standard way and fill in the
  necessary configuration details that are required for their
  particular application.  The benefit of using QPIM is that it
  provides a common lingua franca that each of the device- and/or
  vendor-specific configuration agents can use.  This helps ensure a
  common interpretation of the general policy as well as aid the
  administrator in specifying a common policy to be implemented across
  different devices.  This is analogous to the fundamental object-
  oriented paradigm of separating specification from implementation.
  Using QPIM, traffic conditioning can be specified in a general manner
  that can help different implementations satisfy a common goal.

  For example, a valid policy may include only a single rule that
  specifies that bandwidth should be reserved for a given set of
  traffic flows.  The rule does not need to include any of the various
  other details that may be needed for implementing a scheduler that
  supports this bandwidth allocation (e.g., the queue length required).
  It is assumed that a PDP or the PEPs would fill in these details
  using (for example) their default queue length settings.  The policy



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  writer need only specify the main goal of the policy, making sure
  that the preferred application receives enough bandwidth to operate
  adequately.

1.2.2.  Policy Domain Model

  An important design goal of QPIM is to provide a means for defining
  policies that span numerous devices.  This goal differentiates QPIM
  from device-level information models, which are designed for modeling
  policy that controls a single device, its mechanisms and
  capabilities.

  This design goal has several ramifications.  First, roles [PCIM] are
  used to define policies across multiple devices.  Second, the use of
  abstract policies frees the policy definition process from having to
  deal with individual device peculiarities, and leaves interpretation
  and configuration to be modeled by PDPs or other configuration
  agents. Third, QPIM allows extensive reuse of all policy building
  blocks in multiple rules used within different devices.

1.2.2.1.  Model QoS Policy in a Device- and Vendor-Independent Manner

  QPIM models QoS policy in a way designed to be independent of any
  particular device or vendor.  This enables networks made up of
  different devices that have different capabilities to be managed and
  controlled using a single standard set of policies.  Using such a
  single set of policies is important because otherwise, the policy
  will itself reflect the differences between different device
  implementations.

1.2.2.2.  Use Roles for Mapping Policy to Network Devices

  The use of roles enables a policy definition to be targeted to the
  network function of a network element, rather than to the element's
  type and capabilities.  The use of roles for mapping policy to
  network elements provides an efficient and simple method for compact
  and abstract policy definition.  A given abstract policy may be
  mapped to a group of network elements without the need to specify
  configuration for each of those elements based on the capabilities of
  any one individual element.

  The policy definition is designed to allow aggregating multiple
  devices within the same role, if desired.  For example, if two core
  network interfaces operate at different rates, one does not have to
  define two separate policy rules to express the very same abstract
  policy (e.g., allocating 30% of the interface bandwidth to a given





Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  preferred set of flows).  The use of hierarchical context and
  relative QoS actions in QPIM addresses this and other related
  problems.

1.2.2.3.  Reusability

  Reusable objects, as defined by [PCIM] and [PCIMe], are the means for
  sharing policy building blocks, thus allowing central management of
  global concepts.  QPIM provides the ability to reuse all policy
  building blocks: variables and values, conditions and actions,
  traffic profiles, and policy groups and policy rules.  This provides
  the required flexibility to manage large sets of policy rules over
  large policy domains.

  For example, the following rule makes use of centrally defined
  objects being reused (referenced):

     If <DestinationAddress == FinanceSubNet> then <DSCP =
     MissionCritical>

  In this rule, the condition refers to an object named FinanceSubNet,
  which is a value (or possibly a set of values) defined and maintained
  in a reusable objects container.  The QoS action makes use of a value
  named MissionCritical, which is also a reusable object.  The
  advantage of specifying a policy in this way is its inherent
  flexibility.  Given the above policy, whenever business needs require
  a change in the subnet definition for the organization, all that's
  required is to change the reusable value FinanceSubNet centrally.
  All referencing rules are immediately affected, without the need to
  modify them individually. Without this capability, the repository
  that is used to store the rules would have to be searched for all
  rules that refer to the finance subnet, and then each matching rule's
  condition would have to be individually updated.  This is not only
  much less efficient, but also is more prone to error.

  For a complete description of reusable objects, refer to [PCIM] and
  [PCIMe].

1.2.3.  Enforceable Policy

  Policy defined by QPIM should be enforceable.  This means that a PDP
  can use QPIM's policy definition in order to make the necessary
  decisions and enforce the required policy rules.  For example, RSVP
  admission decisions should be made based on the policy definitions
  specified by QPIM.  A PDP should be able to map QPIM policy
  definitions into PEP configurations, using either standard or
  proprietary protocols.




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  QPIM is designed to be agnostic of any particular, vendor-dependent
  technology.  However, QPIM's constructs SHOULD always be interpreted
  so that policy-compliant behavior can be enforced on the network
  under management.  Therefore, there are three fundamental
  requirements that QPIM must satisfy:

  1. Policy specified by QPIM must be able to be mapped to actual
     network elements.

  2. Policy specified by QPIM must be able to control QoS network
     functions without making reference to a specific type of device or
     vendor.

  3. Policy specified by QPIM must be able to be translated into
     network element configuration.

  QPIM satisfies requirements #1 and #2 above by using the concept of
  roles (specifically, the PolicyRoles property, defined in PCIM).  By
  matching roles assigned to policy groups and to network elements, a
  PDP (or other enforcement agent) can determine what policy should be
  applied to a given device or devices.

  The use of roles in mapping policy to network elements supports model
  scalability.  QPIM policy can be mapped to large-scale policy domains
  by assigning a single role to a group of network elements.  This can
  be done even when the policy domain contains heterogeneous devices.
  So, a small set of policies can be deployed to large networks without
  having to re-specify the policy for each device separately.  This
  QPIM property is important for QoS policy management applications
  that strive to ease the task of policy definition for large policy
  domains.

  Requirement #2 is also satisfied by making QPIM domain-oriented (see
  [TERMS] for a definition of "domain").  In other words, the target of
  the policy is a domain, as opposed to a specific device or interface.

  Requirement #3 is satisfied by modeling QoS conditions and actions
  that are commonly configured on various devices.  However, QPIM is
  extensible to allow modeling of actions that are not included in
  QPIM.

  It is important to note that different PEPs will have different
  capabilities and functions, which necessitate different individual
  configurations even if the different PEPs are controlled by the same
  policy.






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


1.2.4.  QPIM Covers Both Signaled And Provisioned QoS

  The two predominant standards-based QoS methodologies developed so
  far are Differentiated Services (DiffServ) and Integrated Services
  (IntServ).  The DiffServ provides a way to enforce policies that
  apply to a large number of devices in a scalable manner.  QPIM
  provides actions and conditions that control the classification,
  policing and shaping done within the differentiated service domain
  boundaries, as well as actions that control the per-hop behavior
  within the core of the DiffServ network.  QPIM does not mandate the
  use of DiffServ as a policy methodology.

  Integrated services, together with its signaling protocol (RSVP),
  provides a way for end nodes (and edge nodes) to request QoS from the
  network.  QPIM provides actions that control the reservation of such
  requests within the network.

  As both methodologies continue to evolve, QPIM does not attempt to
  provide full coverage of all possible scenarios.  Instead, QPIM aims
  to provide policy control modeling for all major scenarios.  QPIM is
  designed to be extensible to allow for incorporation of control over
  newly developed QoS mechanisms.

1.2.5.  Interoperability for PDPs and Management Applications

  Another design goal of QPIM is to facilitate interoperability among
  policy systems such as PDPs and policy management applications.  QPIM
  accomplishes this interoperability goal by standardizing the
  representation of policy.  Producers and consumers of QoS policy need
  only rely on QPIM-based schemata (and resulting data models) to
  ensure mutual understanding and agreement on the semantics of QoS
  policy.

  For example, suppose that a QoS policy management application, built
  by vendor A writes its policies based on the LDAP schema that maps
  from QPIM to a directory implementation using LDAP.  Now assume that
  a separately built PDP from vendor B also relies on this same LDAP
  schema derived from QPIM.  Even though these are two vendors with two
  different PDPs, each may read the schema of the other and
  "understand" it.  This is because both the management application and
  the PDP were architected to comply with the QPIM specification.  The
  same is true with two policy management applications.  For example,
  vendor B's policy application may run a validation tool that computes
  whether there are conflicts within rules specified by the other
  vendor's policy management application.






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  Interoperability of QPIM producers/consumers is by definition at a
  high level, and does not guarantee that the same policy will result
  in the same PEP configuration.  First, different PEPs will have
  different capabilities and functions, which necessitate different
  individual configurations even if the different PEPs are controlled
  by the same policy.  Second, different PDPs will also have different
  capabilities and functions, and may choose to translate the high-
  level QPIM policy differently depending on the functionality of the
  PDP, as well as on the capabilities of the PEPs that are being
  controlled by the PDP.  However, the different configurations should
  still result in the same network behavior as that specified by the
  policy rules.

1.3.  Modeling Abstract QoS Policies

  This section provides a discussion of QoS policy abstraction and the
  way QPIM addresses this issue.

  As described above, the main goal of the QPIM is to create an
  information model that can be used to help bridge part of the
  conceptual gap between a human policy maker and a network element
  that is configured to enforce the policy.  Clearly this wide gap
  implies several translation levels, from the abstract to the
  concrete.  At the abstract end are the business QoS policy rules.
  Once the business rules are known, a network administrator must
  interpret them as network QoS policy and represent this QoS policy by
  using QPIM constructs.  QPIM facilitates a formal representation of
  QoS rules, thus providing the first concretization level: formally
  representing humanly expressed QoS policy.

  When a human business executive defines network policy, it is usually
  done using informal business terms and language.  For example, a
  human may utter a policy statement that reads:

     "human resources applications should have better QoS than simple
     web applications"

  This might be translated to a slightly more sophisticated form, such
  as:

     "traffic generated by our human resources applications should have
     a higher probability of communicating with its destinations than
     traffic generated by people browsing the WEB using non-mission-
     critical applications"

  While this statement clearly defines QoS policy at the business
  level, it isn't specific enough to be enforceable by network
  elements. Translation to "network terms and language" is required.



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  On the other end of the scale, a network element functioning as a
  PEP, such as a router, can be configured with specific commands that
  determine the operational parameters of its inner working QoS
  mechanisms.  For example, the (imaginary) command "output-queue-depth
  = 100" may be an instruction to a network interface card of a router
  to allow up to 100 packets to be stored before subsequent packets are
  discarded (not forwarded).  On a different device within the same
  network, the same instruction may take another form, because a
  different vendor built that device or it has a different set of
  functions, and hence implementation, even though it is from the same
  vendor.  In addition, a particular PEP may not have the ability to
  create queues that are longer than, say, 50 packets, which may result
  in a different instruction implementing the same QoS policy.

  The first example illustrates 'abstract policy', while the second
  illustrates 'concrete configuration'.  Furthermore, the first example
  illustrates end-to-end policy, which covers the conditioning of
  application traffic throughout the network.  The second example
  illustrates configuration for a particular PEP or a set thereof.
  While an end-to-end policy statement can only be enforced by
  configuration of PEPs in various parts of the network, the
  information model of policy and that of the mechanisms that a PEP
  uses to implement that policy are vastly different.

  The translation process from abstract business policy to concrete PEP
  configuration is roughly expressed as follows:

  1. Informal business QoS policy is expressed by a human policy maker
     (e.g., "All executives' WEB requests should be prioritized ahead
     of other employees' WEB requests")

  2. A network administrator analyzes the policy domain's topology and
     determines the roles of particular device interfaces.  A role may
     be assigned to a large group of elements, which will result in
     mapping a particular policy to a large group of device interfaces.

  3. The network administrator models the informal policy using QPIM
     constructs, thus creating a formal representation of the abstract
     policy.  For example, "If a packet's protocol is HTTP and its
     destination is in  the 'EXECUTIVES' user group, then assign IPP 7
     to the packet header".

  4. The network administrator assigns roles to the policy groups
     created in the previous step matching the network elements' roles
     assigned in step #2 above.






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  5. A PDP translates the abstract policy constructs created in step #3
     into device-specific configuration commands for all devices
     effected by the new policy (i.e., devices that have interfaces
     that are assigned a role matching the new policy constructs'
     roles).  In this process, the PDP consults the particular devices'
     capabilities to determine the appropriate configuration commands
     implementing the policy.

  6. For each PEP in the network, the PDP (or an agent of the PDP)
     issues the appropriate device-specific instructions necessary to
     enforce the policy.

  QPIM, PCIM and PCIMe are used in step #3 above.

1.4.  Rule Hierarchy

  Policy is described by a set of policy rules that may be grouped into
  subsets [PCIMe].  Policy rules and policy groups can be nested within
  other policy rules, providing a hierarchical policy definition.
  Nested rules are also called sub-rules, and we use both terms in this
  document interchangeably.  The aggregation PolicySetComponent
  (defined in [PCIMe] is used to represent the nesting of a policy rule
  or group in another policy rule.

  The hierarchical policy rule definition enhances policy readability
  and reusability.  Within the QoS policy information model, hierarchy
  is used to model context or scope for the sub-rule actions.  Within
  QPIM, bandwidth allocation policy actions and drop threshold actions
  use this hierarchal context.  First we provide a detailed example of
  the use of hierarchy in bandwidth allocation policies.  The
  differences between flat and hierarchical policy representation are
  discussed.  The use of hierarchy in drop threshold policies is
  described in a following subsection.  Last but not least, the
  restrictions on the use of rule hierarchies within QPIM are
  described.

1.4.1.  Use of Hierarchy Within Bandwidth Allocation Policies

  Consider the following example where the informal policy reads:

     On any interface on which these rules apply, guarantee at least
     30% of the interface bandwidth to UDP flows, and at least 40% of
     the interface bandwidth to TCP flows.

  The QoS Policy information model follows the Policy Core information
  model by using roles as a way to specify the set of interfaces on
  which this policy applies.  The policy does not assume that all
  interfaces are run at the same speed, or have any other property in



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  common apart from being able to forward packets.  Bandwidth is
  allocated between UDP and TCP flows using percentages of the
  available interface bandwidth.  Assume that we have an available
  interface bandwidth of 1 Mbits/sec.  Then this rule will guarantee
  300Kbits/sec to UDP flows.  However, if the interface bandwidth was
  instead only 64kbits/sec, then this rule would correspondingly
  guarantee 19.2kb/sec.

  This policy is modeled within QPIM using two policy rules of the
  form:

     If (IP protocol is UDP) THEN (guarantee 30% of available BW) (1)
     If (IP protocol is TCP) THEN (guarantee 40% of available BW) (2)

  Assume that these two rules are grouped within a PolicySet [PCIMe]
  carrying the appropriate role combination.  A possible implementation
  of these rules within a PEP would be to use a Weighted-Round-Robin
  scheduler with 3 queues.  The first queue would be used for UDP
  traffic, the second queue for TCP traffic and the third queue for the
  rest of the traffic.  The weights of the Weighted-Round-Robin
  scheduler would be 30% for the first queue, 40% for the second queue
  and 30% for the last queue.

  The actions specifying the bandwidth guarantee implicitly assume that
  the bandwidth resource being guaranteed is the bandwidth available at
  the interface level.  A PolicyRoleCollection is a class defined in
  [PCIMe] whose purpose is to identify the set of resources (in this
  example, interfaces) that are assigned to a particular role.  Thus,
  the type of managed elements aggregated within the
  PolicyRoleCollection defines the bandwidth resource being controlled.
  In our example, interfaces are aggregated within the
  PolicyRoleCollection.  Therefore, the rules specify bandwidth
  allocation to all interfaces that match a given role.  Other behavior
  could be similarly defined by changing what was aggregated within the
  PolicyRoleCollection.

  Normally, a full specification of the rules would require indicating
  the direction of the traffic for which bandwidth allocation is being
  made.  Using the direction variable defined in [PCIMe], the rules can
  be specified in the following form:

     If (direction is out)
         If (IP protocol is UDP) THEN (guarantee 30% of available BW)
         If (IP protocol is TCP) THEN (guarantee 40% of available BW)

  where indentation is used to indicate rule nesting.  To save space,
  we omit the direction condition from further discussion.




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  Rule nesting provides the ability to further refine the scope of
  bandwidth allocation within a given traffic class forwarded via these
  interfaces.  The example below adds two nested rules to refine
  bandwidth allocation for UDP and TCP applications.

     If (IP protocol is UDP) THEN (guarantee 30% of available BW) (1)
        If (protocol is TFTP) THEN (guarantee 10% of available BW) (1a)
        If (protocol is NFS) THEN (guarantee 40% of available BW) (1b)
     If (IP protocol is TCP) THEN (guarantee 40% of available BW) (2)
        If (protocol is HTTP) THEN guarantee 20% of available BW) (2a)
        If (protocol is FTP) THEN (guarantee 30% of available BW) (2b)

  Subrules 1a and 1b specify bandwidth allocation for UDP applications.
  The total bandwidth resource being partitioned among UDP applications
  is the bandwidth available for the UDP traffic class (i.e., 30%), not
  the total bandwidth available at the interface level.  Furthermore,
  TFTP and NFS are guaranteed to get at least 10% and 40% of the total
  available bandwidth for UDP, while other UDP applications aren't
  guaranteed to receive anything.  Thus, TFTP and NFS are guaranteed to
  get at least 3% and 12% of the total bandwidth.  Similar logic
  applies to the TCP applications.

  The point of this section will be to show that a hierarchical policy
  representation enables a finer level of granularity for bandwidth
  allocation to be specified than is otherwise available using a non-
  hierarchical policy representation.  To see this, let's compare this
  set of rules with a non-hierarchical (flat) rule representation.  In
  the non-hierarchical representation, the guaranteed bandwidth for
  TFTP flows is calculated by taking 10% of the bandwidth guaranteed to
  UDP flows, resulting in 3% of the total interface bandwidth
  guarantee.

     If (UDP AND TFTP) THEN (guarantee 3% of available BW) (1a)
     If (UDP AND NFS) THEN (guarantee 12% of available BW) (1b)
     If (other UDP APPs) THEN (guarantee 15% of available BW) (1c)
     If (TCP AND HTTP) THEN guarantee 8% of available BW) (2a)
     If (TCP AND FTP) THEN (guarantee 12% of available BW) (2b)
     If (other TCP APPs) THEN (guarantee 20% of available BW) (2c)

  Are these two representations identical?  No, bandwidth allocation is
  not the same.  For example, within the hierarchical representation,
  UDP applications are guaranteed 30% of the bandwidth.  Suppose a
  single UDP flow of an application different from NFS or TFTP is
  running.  This application would be guaranteed 30% of the interface
  bandwidth in the hierarchical representation but only 15% of the
  interface bandwidth in the flat representation.





Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  A two stage scheduler is best modeled by a hierarchical
  representation whereas a flat representation may be realized by a
  non-hierarchical scheduler.

  A schematic hierarchical Weighted-Round-Robin scheduler
  implementation that supports the hierarchical rule representation is
  described below.

     --UDP AND TFTP queue--10%
     --UDP AND NFS  queue--40%-Scheduler-30%--+
     --Other UDP    queue--50%     A1         |
                                              |
     --TCP AND HTTP queue--20%                |
     --TCP AND FTP  queue--30%-Scheduler-40%--Scheduler--Interface
     --Other TCP    queue--50%     A2         |   B
                                              |
     ------------Non UDP/TCP traffic-----30%--+

  Scheduler A1 extracts packets from the 3 UDP queues according to the
  weight specified by the UDP sub-rule policy.  Scheduler A2 extracts
  packets from the 3 TCP queues specified by the TCP sub-rule policy.
  The second stage scheduler B schedules between UDP, TCP and all other
  traffic according to the policy specified in the top most rule level.

  Another difference between the flat and hierarchical rule
  representation is the actual division of bandwidth above the minimal
  bandwidth guarantee.  Suppose two high rate streams are being
  forwarded via this interface: an HTTP stream and an NFS stream.
  Suppose that the rate of each flow is far beyond the capacity of the
  interface.  In the flat scheduler implementation, the ratio between
  the weights is 8:12 (i.e., HTTP:NFS), and therefore HTTP stream would
  consume 40% of the bandwidth while NFS would consume 60% of the
  bandwidth.  In the hierarchical scheduler implementation the only
  scheduler that has two queues filled is scheduler B, therefore the
  ratio between the HTTP (TCP) stream and the NFS (UDP) stream would be
  30:40, and therefore the HTTP stream would consume approximately 42%
  of the interface bandwidth while NFS would consume 58% of the
  interface bandwidth.  In both cases both HTTP and NFS streams got
  more than the minimal guaranteed bandwidth, but the actual rates
  forwarded via the interface differ.

  The conclusion is that hierarchical policy representation provides
  additional structure and context beyond the flat policy
  representation.  Furthermore, policies specifying bandwidth
  allocation using rule hierarchies should be enforced using
  hierarchical schedulers where the rule hierarchy level is mapped to
  the hierarchical scheduler level.




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


1.4.2.  Use of Rule Hierarchy to Describe Drop Threshold Policies

  Two major resources govern the per hop behavior in each node.  The
  bandwidth allocation resource governs the forwarding behavior of each
  traffic class.  A scheduler priority and weights are controlled by
  the bandwidth allocation policies, as well as the (minimal) number of
  queues needed for traffic separation.  A second resource, which is
  not controlled by bandwidth allocation policies, is the queuing
  length and drop behavior.  For this purpose, queue length and
  threshold policies are used.

  Rule hierarchy is used to describe the context on which thresholds
  act.  The policy rule's condition describes the traffic class and the
  rule's actions describe the bandwidth allocation, the forwarding
  priority and the queue length.  If the traffic class contains
  different drop precedence sub-classes that require different
  thresholds within the same queue, the sub-rules actions describe
  these thresholds.

  Below is an example of the use of rule nesting for threshold control
  purposes.  Let's look at the following rules:

     If (protocol is FTP) THEN (guarantee 10% of available BW)
                               (queue length equals 40 packets)
                               (drop technique is random)

        if (src-ip is from net 2.x.x.x) THEN min threshold = 30%
                                             max threshold = 70%

        if (src-ip is from net 3.x.x.x) THEN min threshold = 40%
                                             max threshold = 90%

        if (all other)                  THEN min threshold = 20%
                                                   max threshold = 60%

  The rule describes the bandwidth allocation, the queue length and the
  drop technique assigned to FTP flows.  The sub-rules describe the
  drop threshold priorities within those FTP flows.  FTP packets
  received from all networks apart from networks 2.x.x.x and 3.x.x.x
  are randomly dropped when the queue threshold for FTP flows
  accumulates to 20% of the queue length.  Once the queue fills to 60%,
  all these packets are dropped before queuing.  The two other sub
  rules provide other thresholds for FTP packets coming from the
  specified two subnets.  The Assured Forwarding per hop behavior (AF)
  is another good example of the use of hierarchy to describe the
  different drop preferences within a traffic class.  This example is
  provided in a later section.




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


1.4.3.  Restrictions of the Use of Hierarchy Within QPIM

  Rule nesting is used within QPIM for two important purposes:

  1) Enhance clarity, readability and reusability.

  2) Provide hierarchical context for actions.

  The second point captures the ability to specify context for
  bandwidth allocation, as well as providing context for drop threshold
  policies.

  When is a hierarchy level supposed to specify the bandwidth
  allocation context, when is the hierarchy used for specifying the
  drop threshold context, and when is it used merely for clarity and
  reusability?  The answer depends entirely on the actions.  Bandwidth
  control actions within a sub-rule specify how the bandwidth allocated
  to the traffic class determined by the rule's condition clause should
  be further divided among the sub-rules.  Drop threshold actions
  control the traffic class's queue drop behavior for each of the sub-
  rules.  The bandwidth control actions have an implicit pointer
  saying: the bandwidth allocation is relative to the bandwidth
  resources defined by the higher level rule. Drop threshold actions
  have an implicit pointer saying: the thresholds are taken from the
  queue resources defined by the higher level rule. Other actions do
  not have such an implicit pointer, and for these actions hierarchy is
  used only for reusability and readability purposes.

  Each rule that includes a bandwidth allocation action implies that a
  queue should be allocated to the traffic class defined by the rule's
  condition clause.  Therefore, once a bandwidth allocation action
  exists within the actions of a sub-rule, a threshold action within
  this sub-rule cannot refer to thresholds of the parent rule's queue.
  Instead, it must refer to the queue of the sub-rule itself.
  Therefore, in order to have a clear and unambiguous definition,
  refinement of thresholds and refinements of bandwidth allocations
  within sub-rules should be avoided.  If both refinements are needed
  for the same rule, threshold refinements and bandwidth refinements
  rules should each be aggregated to a separate group, and these groups
  should be aggregated under the policy rule, using the
  PolicySetComponent aggregation.










Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


1.5.  Intended Audiences

  QPIM is intended for several audiences.  The following lists some of
  the intended audiences and their respective uses:

  1. Developers of QoS policy management applications can use this
     model as an extensible framework for defining policies to control
     PEPs and PDPs in an interoperable manner.

  2. Developers of Policy Decision Point (PDP) systems built to control
     resource allocation signaled by RSVP requests.

  3. Developers of Policy Decision Points (PDP) systems built to create
     QoS configuration for PEPs.

  4. Builders of large organization data and knowledge bases who decide
     to combine QoS policy information with other networking policy
     information, assuming all modeling is based on [PCIM] and [PCIMe].

  5. Authors of various standards may use constructs introduced in this
     document to enhance their work.  Authors of data models wishing to
     map a storage specific technology to QPIM must use this document
     as well.

2.  Class Hierarchies

2.1.  Inheritance Hierarchy

  QPIM's class and association inheritance hierarchies are rooted in
  [PCIM] and [PCIMe].  Figures 2 and 3 depict these QPIM inheritance
  hierarchies, while noting their relationships to [PCIM] and
  [PCIMe]classes.  Note that many other classes used to form QPIM
  policies, such as SimplePolicyCondition, are defined in [PCIM] and
  [PCIMe].  Thus, the following figures do NOT represent ALL necessary
  classes and relationships for defining QPIM policies.  Rather, the
  designer using QPIM should use appropriate classes and relationships
  from [PCIM] and [PCIMe] in conjunction with those defined below.














Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


[ManagedElement] (abstract, PCIM)
  |
  +--Policy (abstract, PCIM)
  |  |
  |  +---PolicyAction (abstract, PCIM)
  |  |     |
  |  |     +---SimplePolicyAction (PCIMe)
  |  |     |   |
  |  |     |   +---QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction (QPIM)
  |  |     |
  |  |     +---QoSPolicyDiscardAction (QPIM)
  |  |     |
  |  |     +---QoSPolicyAdmissionAction (abstract, QPIM)
  |  |     |   |
  |  |     |   +---QoSPolicyPoliceAction (QPIM)
  |  |     |   |
  |  |     |   +---QoSPolicyShapeAction (QPIM)
  |  |     |   |
  |  |     |   +---QoSPolicyRSVPAdmissionAction (QPIM)
  |  |     |
  |  |     +---QoSPolicyPHBAction (abstract, QPIM)
  |  |         |
  |  |         +---QoSPolicyBandwidthAction (QPIM)
  |  |         |
  |  |         +---QoSPolicyCongestionControlAction (QPIM)
  |  |
  |  +---QoSPolicyTrfcProf (abstract, QPIM)
  |  |   |
  |  |   +---QoSPolicyTokenBucketTrfcProf (QPIM)
  |  |   |
  |  |   +---QoSPolicyIntServTrfcProf (QPIM)
  |  |
  |  |
  |  +---PolicyVariable (abstract, PCIMe)
  |  |   |
  |  |   +---PolicyImplicitVariable (abstract, PCIMe)
  |  |       |
  |  |       +---QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (abstract, QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPSourceIPv4Variable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationIPv4Variable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPSourceIPv6Variable (QPIM)
  |  |           |

(continued on the next page)




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


(continued from the previous page)

[ManagedElement] (abstract, PCIM, repeated for convenience)
  |
  +--Policy (abstract, PCIM, repeated for convenience)
  |  |
  |  +---PolicyVariable (abstract, PCIMe)
  |  |   |
  |  |   +---PolicyImplicitVariable (abstract, PCIMe)
  |  |       |
  |  |       +---QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (abstract, QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationIPv6Variable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPSourcePortVariable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationPortVariable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPIPProtocolVariable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPIPVersionVariable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPDCLASSVariable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPStyleVariable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPDIntServVariable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPMessageTypeVariable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPPreemptionPriorityVariable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPPreemptionDefPriorityVariable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPUserVariable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPApplicationVariable (QPIM)
  |  |           |
  |  |           +---QoSPolicyRSVPAuthMethodVariable (QPIM)
  |  |
  |  +---PolicyValue (abstract, PCIMe)
  |  |     |
  |  |     +---QoSPolicyDNValue (QPIM)
  |  |     |
  |  |     +---QoSPolicyAttributeValue (QPIM)

           Figure 2.  The QPIM Class Inheritance Hierarchy




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


2.2.  Relationship Hierarchy

  Figure 3 shows the QPIM relationship hierarchy.

  [unrooted] (abstract, PCIM)
    |
    +---Dependency (abstract)
    |   |
    |   +--- QoSPolicyTrfcProfInAdmissionAction (QPIM)
    |   |
    |   +--- QoSPolicyConformAction (QPIM)
    |   |
    |   +--- QoSPolicyExceedAction (QPIM)
    |   |
    |   +--- QoSPolicyViolateAction (QPIM)
    |   |
    |   +--- PolicyVariableInSimplePolicyAction
    |   |       |
    |   |       + QoSPolicyRSVPVariableInRSVPSimplePolicyAction

       Figure 3.  The QPIM Association Class Inheritance Hierarchy

3.  QoS Actions

  This section describes the QoS actions that are modeled by QPIM.  QoS
  actions are policy enforced network behaviors that are specified for
  traffic selected by QoS conditions.  QoS actions are modeled using
  the classes PolicyAction (defined in [PCIM]), SimplePolicyAction
  (defined in [PCIMe]) and several QoS actions defined in this document
  that are derived from both of these classes, which are described
  below.

  Note that there is no discussion of PolicyRule, PolicyGroup, or
  different types of PolicyCondition classes in this document.  This is
  because these classes are fully specified in [PCIM] and [PCIMe].

3.1.  Overview

  QoS policy based systems allow the network administrator to specify a
  set of rules that control both the selection of the flows that need
  to be provided with a preferred forwarding treatment, as well as
  specifying the specific set of preferred forwarding behaviors.  QPIM
  provides an information model for specifying such a set of rules.

  QoS policy rules enable controlling environments in which RSVP
  signaling is used to request different forwarding treatment for
  different traffic types from the network, as well as environments
  where no signaling is used, but preferred treatment is desired for



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  some (but not all) traffic types.  QoS policy rules also allow
  controlling environments where strict QoS guarantees are provided to
  individual flows, as well as environments where QoS is provided to
  flow aggregates.  QoS actions allow a PDP or a PEP to determine which
  RSVP requests should be admitted before network resources are
  allocated.  QoS actions allow control of the RSVP signaling content
  itself, as well as differentiation between priorities of RSVP
  requests.  QoS actions allow controlling the Differentiated Service
  edge enforcement including policing, shaping and marking, as well as
  the per-hop behaviors used in the network core.  Finally, QoS actions
  can be used to control mapping of RSVP requests at the edge of a
  differentiated service cloud into per hop behaviors.

  Four groups of actions are derived from action classes defined in
  [PCIM] and [PCIMe].  The first QoS action group contains a single
  action, QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction.  This action is used for both RSVP
  signal control and install actions.  The second QoS action group
  determines whether a flow or class of flows should be admitted.  This
  is done by specifying an appropriate traffic profile using the
  QoSPolicyTrfcProf class and its subclasses.  This set of actions also
  includes QoS admission control actions, which use the
  QoSPolicyAdmissionAction class and its subclasses.  The third group
  of actions control bandwidth allocation and congestion control
  differentiations, which together specify the per-hop behavior
  forwarding treatment.  This group of actions includes the
  QoSPolicyPHBAction class and its subclasses.  The fourth QoS action
  is an unconditional packet discard action, which uses the
  QoSPolicyDiscardAction class.  This action is used either by itself
  or as a building block of the QoSPolicyPoliceAction.

  Note that some QoS actions are not directly modeled.  Instead, they
  are modeled by using the class SimplePolicyAction with the
  appropriate associations.  For example, the three marking actions
  (DSCP, IPP and CoS) are modeled by using the SimplePolicyAction
  class, and associating that class with variables and values of the
  appropriate type defined in [PCIMe].

3.2.  RSVP Policy Actions

  There are three types of decisions a PDP (either remote or within a
  PEP) can make when it evaluates an RSVP request:

  1.  Admit or reject the request
  2.  Add or modify the request admission parameters
  3.  Modify the RSVP signaling content






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  The COPS for RSVP [RFC2749] specification uses different Decision
  object types to model each of these decisions.  QPIM follows the COPS
  for RSVP specification and models each decision using a different
  action class.

  The QoSPolicyRSVPAdmissionAction controls the Decision Command and
  Decision Flags objects used within COPS for RSVP.  The
  QoSPolicyRSVPAdmissionAction class, with its associated
  QoSPolicyIntServTrfcProf class, is used to determine whether to
  accept or reject a given RSVP request by comparing the RSVP request's
  TSPEC or RSPEC parameters against the traffic profile specified by
  the QoSPolicyIntServTrfcProf.  For a full description of the
  comparison method, see section 4.  Following the COPS for RSVP
  specification, the admission decision has an option to both accept
  the request and send a warning to the requester.  The
  QoSPolicyRSVPAdmissionAction can be used to limit the number of
  admitted reservations as well.

  The class QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction, which is derived from the
  PolicySimpleAction class [PCIMe], can be used to control the two
  other COPS RSVP decision types.  The property qpRSVPActionType
  designates the instance of the class to be either of type 'REPLACE',
  'STATELESS', or both ('REPLACEANDSTATELESS').  For instances carrying
  a qpRSVPActionType property value of 'REPLACE', the action is
  interpreted as a COPS Replace Decision, controlling the contents of
  the RSVP message.  For instances carrying a qpRSVPActionType property
  value of 'STATELESS', the action is interpreted as a COPS Stateless
  Decision, controlling the admission parameters.  If both of these
  actions are required, this can be done by assigning the value
  REPLACEANDSTATELESS to the qpRSVPActionType property.

  This class is modeled to represent the COPS for RSVP Replace and
  Stateless decisions.  This similarity allows future use of these COPS
  decisions to be directly controlled by a QoSPolicySimpleAction.  The
  only required extension might be the definition of a new RSVP
  variable.

3.2.1.  Example: Controlling COPS Stateless Decision

  The QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction allows the specification of admission
  parameters.  It allows specification of the preemption priority
  [RFC3181] of a given RSVP Reservation request.  Using the preemption
  priority value, the PEP can determine the importance of a Reservation
  compared with already admitted reservations, and if necessary can
  preempt lower priority reservations to make room for the higher
  priority one.  This class can also be used to control mapping of RSVP
  requests to a differentiated services domain by setting the




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  QoSPolicyRSVPDCLASSVariable to the required value.  This instructs
  the PEP to mark traffic matching the Session and Sender
  specifications carried in an RSVP request to a given DSCP value.

3.2.2.  Example: Controlling the COPS Replace Decision

  A Policy system should be able to control the information carried in
  the RSVP messages.  The QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction allows control of
  the content of RSVP signaling messages.  An RSVP message can carry a
  preemption policy object [RFC3181] specifying the priority of the
  reservation request in comparison to other requests.  An RSVP message
  can also carry a policy object for authentication purposes.  An RSVP
  message can carry a DCLASS [DCLASS] object that specifies to the
  receiver or sender the particular DSCP value that should be set on
  the data traffic.  A COPS for RSVP Replacement Data Decision controls
  the content of the RSVP message by specifying a set of RSVP objects
  replacing or removing the existing ones.

3.3.  Provisioning Policy Actions

  The differentiated Service Architecture [DIFFSERV] was designed to
  provide a scalable QoS differentiation without requiring any
  signaling protocols running between the hosts and the network.  The
  QoS actions modeled in QPIM can be used to control all of the
  building blocks of the Differentiated Service architecture, including
  per-hop behaviors, edge classification, and policing and shaping,
  without a need to specify the datapath mechanisms used by PEP
  implementations.  This provides an abstraction level hiding the
  unnecessary details and allowing the network administrator to write
  rules that express the network requirements in a more natural form.
  In this architecture, as no signaling between the end host and the
  network occurs before the sender starts sending information, the QoS
  mechanisms should be set up in advance.  This usually means that PEPs
  need to be provisioned with the set of policy rules in advance.

  Policing and Shaping actions are modeled as subclasses of the QoS
  admission action.  DSCP and CoS marking are modeled by using the
  SimplePolicyAction ([PCIMe]) class associated with the appropriate
  variables and values.  Bandwidth allocation and congestion control
  actions are modeled as subclasses of the QpQPolicyPHBAction, which is
  itself a subclass PolicyAction class ([PCIM])

3.3.1.  Admission Actions: Controlling Policers and Shapers

  Admission Actions (QoSPolicyAdmissionAction and its subclasses) are
  used to police and/or shape traffic.





Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  Each Admission Action is bound to a traffic profile
  (QoSPolicyTrfcProf) via the QoSPolicyTrfcProfInAdmissionAction
  association.  The traffic profile is used to meter traffic for
  purposes of policing or shaping.

  An Admission Action carries a scope property (qpAdmissionScope) that
  is used to determine whether the action controls individual traffic
  flows or aggregate traffic classes.  The concepts of "flow" and
  "traffic class" are explained in [DIFFSERV] using the terms
  'microflow' and 'traffic stream'.  Roughly speaking, a flow is a set
  of packets carrying an IP header that has the same values for source
  IP, destination IP, protocol and layer 4 source and destination
  ports.  A traffic class is a set of flows.  In QPIM, simple and
  compound conditions can identify flows and/or traffic classes by
  using Boolean terms over the values of IP header fields, including
  the value of the ToS byte.

  Thus, the interpretation of the scope property is as follows: If the
  value of the scope property is 0 (per-flow), each (micro) flow that
  can be positively matched with the rule's condition is metered and
  policed individually.  If the value of the scope property is 1 (per-
  class), all flows matched with the rule's condition are metered as a
  single aggregate and policed together.

  The following example illustrates the use of the scope property.
  Using two provisioned policing actions, the following policies can be
  enforced:

  -  Make sure that each HTTP flow will not exceed 64kb/s

  -  Make sure that the aggregate rate of all HTTP flows will not
     exceed 512Kb/s

  Both policies are modeled using the same class QoSPolicyPoliceAction
  (derived from QoSPolicyAdmissionAction).  The first policy has its
  scope property set to 'flow', while the second policy has its scope
  property set to 'class'.  The two policies are modeled using a rule
  with two police actions that, in a pseudo-formal definition, looks
  like the following:

     If (HTTP) Action1=police, Traffic Profile1=64kb/s, Scope1=flow
               Action2=police, Traffic Profile2=512kb/s, Scope2=class

  The provisioned policing action QoSPolicyPoliceAction has three
  associations, QoSPolicyConformAction, QoSPolicyExceedAction and
  QoSPolicyViolateAction.





Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  To accomplish the desired result stated above, two possible modeling
  techniques may be used: The two actions can be part of a single
  policy rule using two PolicyActionInPolicyRule [PCIM] associations.
  In this case the ExecutionStrategy property of the PolicyRule class
  [PCIMe] SHOULD be set to "Do All" so that both individual flows and
  aggregate streams are policed.

  Alternatively, Action1 and Action2 could be aggregated in a
  CompundPolicyAction instance using the PolicyActionInPolicyAction
  aggregations [PCIMe].  In this case, in order for both individual
  flows and aggregate traffic classes to be policed, the
  ExecutionStrategy property of the CompoundPolicyAction class [PCIMe]
  SHOULD be set to "Do All".

  The policing action is associated with a three-level token bucket
  traffic profile carrying rate, burst and excess-burst parameters.
  Traffic measured by a meter can be classified as conforming traffic
  when the metered rate is below the rate defined by the traffic
  profile, as excess traffic when the metered traffic is above the
  normal burst and below the excess burst size, and violating traffic
  when rate is above the maximum excess burst.

  The [DIFF-MIB] defines a two-level meter, and provides a means to
  combine two-level meters into more complex meters.  In this document,
  a three-level traffic profile is defined.  This allows construction
  of both two-level meters as well as providing an easier definition
  for three-level meters needed for creating AF [AF] provisioning
  actions.

  A policing action that models three-level policing MUST associate
  three separate actions with a three-level traffic profile.  These
  actions are a conforming action, an exceeding action and a violating
  action.  A policing action that models two-level policing uses a
  two-level traffic profile and associates only conforming and
  exceeding actions.  A policing action with a three-level traffic
  profile that specifies an exceed action but does not specify a
  violate action implies that the action taken when the traffic is
  above the maximum excess burst is identical to the action taken when
  the traffic is above the normal burst.  A policer determines whether
  the profile is being met, while the actions to be performed are
  determined by the associations QoSPolicyXXXAction.

  Shapers are used to delay some or all of the packets in a traffic
  stream, in order to bring the stream into compliance with a traffic
  profile.  A shaper usually has a finite-sized buffer, and packets may
  be discarded if there is not sufficient buffer space to hold the
  delayed packets.  Shaping is controlled by the QoSPolicyShapeAction




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  class.  The only required association is a traffic profile that
  specifies the rate and burst parameters that the outgoing flows
  should conform with.

3.3.2.  Controlling Markers

  Three types of marking control actions are modeled in QPIM:
  Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) assignment, IP Precedence
  (IPP) assignment and layer-2 Class of Service (CoS) assignment.
  These assignment actions themselves are modeled by using the
  SimplePolicyAction class associated with the appropriate variables
  and values.

  DSCP assignment sets ("marks" or "colors") the DS field of a packet
  header to a particular DS Code Point (DSCP), adding the marked packet
  to a particular DS behavior aggregate.

  When used in the basic form, "If <condition> then 'DCSP = ds1'", the
  assignment action assigns a DSCP value (ds1) to all packets that
  result in the condition being evaluated to true.

  When used in combination with a policing action, a different
  assignment action can be issued via each of the 'conform', 'exceed'
  and 'violate' action associations.  This way, one may select a PHB in
  a PHB group according to the state of a meter.

  The semantics of the DSCP assignment is encapsulated in the pairing
  of a DSCP variable and a DSCP value within a single
  SimplePolicyAction instance via the appropriate associations.

  IPP assignment sets the IPP field of a packet header to a particular
  IPP value (0 through 7).  The semantics of the IPP assignment is
  encapsulated in the pairing of a ToS variable (PolicyIPTosVariable)
  and a bit string value () (defined in [PCIMe]) within a single
  SimplePolicyAction instance via the appropriate associations.  The
  bit string value is used in its masked bit string format.  The mask
  indicates the relevant 3 bits of the IPP sub field within the ToS
  byte, while the bit string indicates the IPP value to be set.

  CoS assignments control the mapping of a per-hop behavior to a
  layer-2 Class of Service.  For example, mapping of a set of DSCP
  values into a 802.1p user priority value can be specified using a
  rule with a condition describing the set of DSCP values, and a CoS
  assignment action that specifies the required mapping to the given
  user priority value. The semantics of the CoS assignment is
  encapsulated in the pairing of a CoS variable and a CoS value
  (integer in the range of 0 through 7) within a single
  SimplePolicyAction instance via the appropriate associations.



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


3.3.3.  Controlling Edge Policies - Examples

  Assuming that the AF1 behavior aggregate is enforced within a DS
  domain, policy rules on the boundaries of the network should mark
  packets to one of the AF1x DSCPs, depending on the conformance of the
  traffic to a predetermined three-parameter traffic profile.  QPIM
  models such AF1 policing action as defined in Figure 4.

    +-----------------------+    +------------------------------+
    | QoSPolicyPoliceAction |====| QoSPolicyTokenBucketTrfcProf |
    | scope = class         |    | rate = x, bc = y, be = z     |
    +-----------------------+    +------------------------------+
      *     @     #
      *     @     #
      *     @  +--------------------+   +--------------------------+
      *     @  | SimplePolicyAction |---| PolicyIntegerValue -AF13 |
      *     @  +--------------------+   +--------------------------+
      *     @
      *  +--------------------+   +---------------------------+
      *  | SimplePolicyAction |---| PolicyIntegerValue - AF12 |
      *  +--------------------+   +---------------------------+
      *
    +--------------------+   +---------------------------+
    | SimplePolicyAction |---| PolicyIntegerValue - AF11 |
    +--------------------+   +---------------------------+

  Association and Aggregation Legend:

    ****  QoSPolicyConformAction
    @@@@  QoSPolicyExceedAction
    ####  QoSPolicyViolateAction
    ====  QoSTrfcProfInAdmissionAction
    ----  PolicyValueInSimplePolicyAction ([PCIMe])
    &&&&  PolicyVariableInSimplePolicyAction ([PCIMe], not shown)

                  Figure 4.    AF Policing and Marking

  The AF policing action is composed of a police action, a token bucket
  traffic profile and three instances of the SimplePolicyAction class.
  Each of the simple policy action instances models a different marking
  action.  Each SimplePolicyAction uses the aggregation
  PolicyVariableInSimplePolicyAction to specify that the associated
  PolicyDSCPVariable is set to the appropriate integer value.  This is
  done using the PolicyValueInSimplePolicyAction aggregation.  The
  three PolicyVariableInSimplePolicyAction aggregations which connect
  the appropriate SimplePolicyActions with the appropriate DSCP





Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  Variables, are not shown in this figure for simplicity.  AF11 is
  marked on detecting conforming traffic; AF12 is marked on detecting
  exceeding traffic, and AF13 on detecting violating traffic.

  The second example, shown in Figure 5, is the simplest policing
  action.  Traffic below a two-parameter traffic profile is unmodified,
  while traffic exceeding the traffic profile is discarded.

    +-----------------------+    +------------------------------+
    | QoSPolicyPoliceAction |====| QoSPolicyTokenBucketTrfcProf |
    | scope = class         |    | rate = x, bc = y             |
    +-----------------------+    +------------------------------+
           @
           @
        +-------------------------+
        | QoSPolicyDiscardAction  |
        +-------------------------+

  Association and Aggregation Legend:
    ****  QoSPolicyConformAction (not used)
    @@@@  QoSPolicyExceedAction
    ####  QoSPolicyViolateAction (not used)
    ====  QoSTrfcProfInAdmissionAction

  Figure 5.    A Simple Policing Action

3.4.  Per-Hop Behavior Actions

  A Per-Hop Behavior (PHB) is a description of the externally
  observable forwarding behavior of a DS node applied to a particular
  DS behavior aggregate [DIFFSERV].  The approach taken here is that a
  PHB action specifies both observable forwarding behavior (e.g., loss,
  delay, jitter) as well as specifying the buffer and bandwidth
  resources that need to be allocated to each of the behavior
  aggregates in order to achieve this behavior.  That is, a rule with a
  set of PHB actions can specify that an EF packet must not be delayed
  more than 20 msec in each hop.  The same rule may also specify that
  EF packets need to be treated with preemptive forwarding (e.g., with
  priority queuing), and specify the maximum bandwidth for this class,
  as well as the maximum buffer resources.  PHB actions can therefore
  be used both to represent the final requirements from PHBs and to
  provide enough detail to be able to map the PHB actions into a set of
  configuration parameters to configure queues, schedulers, droppers
  and other mechanisms.

  The QoSPolicyPHBAction abstract class has two subclasses.  The
  QoSPolicyBandwidthAction class is used to control bandwidth, delay
  and forwarding behavior, while the QoSPolicyCongestionControlAction



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  class is used to control queue size, thresholds and congestion
  algorithms.  The qpMaxPacketSize property of the QoSPolicyPHBAction
  class specifies the packet size in bytes, and is needed when
  translating the bandwidth and congestion control actions into actual
  implementation configurations. For example, an implementation
  measuring queue length in bytes will need to use this property to map
  the qpQueueSize property into the desired queue length in bytes.

3.4.1.  Controlling Bandwidth and Delay

  QoSPolicyBandwidthAction allows specifying the minimal bandwidth that
  should be reserved for a class of traffic.  The property
  qpMinBandwidth can be specified either in Kb/sec or as a percentage
  of the total available bandwidth.  The property qpBandwidthUnits is
  used to determine whether percentages or fixed values are used.

  The property qpForwardingPriority is used whenever preemptive
  forwarding is required.  A policy rule that defines the EF PHB should
  indicate a non-zero forwarding priority.  The qpForwardingPriority
  property holds an integer value to enable multiple levels of
  preemptive forwarding where higher values are used to specify higher
  priority.

  The property qpMaxBandwidth specifies the maximum bandwidth that
  should be allocated to a class of traffic.  This property may be
  specified in PHB actions with non-zero forwarding priority in order
  to guard against starvation of other PHBs.

  The properties qpMaxDelay and qpMaxJitter specify limits on the per-
  hop delay and jitter in milliseconds for any given packet within a
  traffic class.  Enforcement of the maximum delay and jitter may
  require use of preemptive forwarding as well as minimum and maximum
  bandwidth controls.  Enforcement of low max delay and jitter values
  may also require fragmentation and interleave mechanisms over low
  speed links.

  The Boolean property qpFairness indicates whether flows should have a
  fair chance to be forwarded without drop or delay.  A way to enforce
  a bandwidth action with qpFairness set to TRUE would be to build a
  queue per flow for the class of traffic specified in the rule's
  filter.  In this way, interactive flows like terminal access will not
  be queued behind a bursty flow (like FTP) and therefore have a
  reasonable response time.

3.4.2.  Congestion Control Actions

  The QoSPolicyCongestionControlAction class controls queue length,
  thresholds and congestion control algorithms.



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  A PEP should be able to keep in its queues qpQueueSize packets
  matching the rule's condition.  In order to provide a link-speed
  independent queue size, the qpQueueSize property can also be measured
  in milliseconds.  The time interval specifies the time needed to
  transmit all packets within the queue if the link speed is dedicated
  entirely for transmission of packets within this queue.  The property
  qpQueueSizeUnit determines whether queue size is measured in number
  of packets or in milliseconds.  The property qpDropMethod selects
  either tail-drop, head-drop or random-drop algorithms.  The set of
  maximum and minimum threshold values can be specified as well, using
  qpDropMinThresholdValue and qpDropMaxThresholdValue properties,
  either in packets or in percentage of the total available queue size
  as specified by the qpDropThresholdUnits property.

3.4.3.  Using Hierarchical Policies: Examples for PHB Actions

  Hierarchical policy definition is a primary tool in the QoS Policy
  information model.  Rule nesting introduced in [PCIMe] allows
  specification of hierarchical policies controlling RSVP requests,
  hierarchical shaping, policing and marking actions, as well as
  hierarchical schedulers and definition of the differences in PHB
  groups.

  This example provides a set of rules that specify PHBs enforced
  within a Differentiated Service domain.  The network administrator
  chose to enforce the EF, AF11 and AF13 and Best Effort PHBs.  For
  simplicity, AF12 is not differentiated.  The set of rules takes the
  form:

     If (EF) then do EF actions
     If (AF1) then do AF1 actions
         If (AF11) then do AF11 actions
         If (AF12) then do AF12 actions
         If (AF13) then do AF13 actions
     If (default) then do Default actions.

  EF, AF1, AF11, AF12 and AF13 are conditions that filter traffic
  according to DSCP values.  The AF1 condition matches the entire AF1
  PHB group including the AF11, AF12 and AF13 DSCP values.  The default
  rule specifies the Best Effort rules.  The nesting of the AF1x rules
  within the AF1 rule specifies that there are further refinements on
  how AF1x traffic should be treated relative to the entire AF1 PHB
  group.  The set of rules reside in a PolicyGroup with a decision
  strategy property set to 'FirstMatching'.

  The class instances below specify the set of actions used to describe
  each of the PHBs.  Queue sizes are not specified, but can easily be
  added to the example.



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  The actions used to describe the Best Effort PHB are simple.  No
  bandwidth is allocated to Best Effort traffic.  The first action
  specifies that Best Effort traffic class should have fairness.

  QoSPolicyBandwidthAction  BE-B:
    qpFairness: TRUE

  The second action specifies that the congestion algorithm for the
  Best Effort traffic class should be random, and specifies the
  thresholds in percentage of the default queue size.

  QoSPolicyCongestionControlAction  BE-C:
    qpDropMethod: random
    qpDropThresholdUnits %
    qpDropMinThreshold:  10%
    qpDropMaxThreshold:  70%

  EF requires preemptive forwarding.  The maximum bandwidth is also
  specified to make sure that the EF class does not starve the other
  classes.  EF PHB uses tail drop as the applications using EF are
  supposed to be UDP-based and therefore would not benefit from a
  random dropper.

  QoSPolicyBandwidthAction  EF-B:
    qpForwardingPriority: 1
    qpBandwidthUnits: %
    qpMaxBandwidth  50%
    qpFairness: FALSE

  QoSPolicyCongestionControlAction  EF-C:
    qpDropMethod: tail-drop
    qpDropThresholdUnits packet
    qpDropMaxThreshold:  3 packets

  The AF1 actions define the bandwidth allocations for the entire PHB
  group:

  QoSPolicyBandwidthAction  AF1-B:
    qpBandwidthUnits: %
    qpMinBandwidth: 30%

  The AF1i actions specifies the differentiating refinement for the
  AF1x PHBs within the AF1 PHB group.  The different threshold values
  provide the difference in discard probability of the AF1x PHBs within
  the AF1 PHB group.






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  QoSPolicyCongestionControlAction  AF11-C:
    qpDropMethod: random
    qpDropThresholdUnits packet
    qpDropMinThreshold:  6 packets
    qpDropMaxThreshold:  16 packets

  QoSPolicyCongestionControlAction  AF12-C:
    qpDropMethod: random
    qpDropThresholdUnits packet
    qpDropMinThreshold:  4 packets
    qpDropMaxThreshold:  13 packets

  QoSPolicyCongestionControlAction  AF13-C:
    qpDropMethod: random
    qpDropThresholdUnits packet
    qpDropMinThreshold:  2 packets
    qpDropMaxThreshold:  10 packets

4.  Traffic Profiles

  Meters measure the temporal state of a flow or a set of flows against
  a traffic profile.  In this document, traffic profiles are modeled by
  the QoSPolicyTrfcProf class.  The association QoSPolicyTrfcProf
  InAdmissionAction binds the traffic profile to the admission action
  using it.  Two traffic profiles are derived from the abstract class
  QoSPolicyTrfcProf.  The first is a Token Bucket provisioning traffic
  profile carrying rate and burst parameters.  The second is an RSVP
  traffic profile, which enables flows to be compared with RSVP TSPEC
  and FLOWSPEC parameters.

4.1.  Provisioning Traffic Profiles

  Provisioned Admission Actions, including shaping and policing, are
  specified using a two- or three-parameter token bucket traffic
  profile.  The QoSPolicyTokenBucketTrfcProf class includes the
  following properties:

  1.  Rate measured in kbits/sec
  2.  Normal burst measured in bytes
  3.  Excess burst measured in bytes

  Rate determines the long-term average transmission rate.  Traffic
  that falls under this rate is conforming, as long as the normal burst
  is not exceeded at any time.  Traffic exceeding the normal burst but
  still below the excess burst is exceeding the traffic profile.
  Traffic beyond the excess burst is said to be violating the traffic
  profile.




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  Excess burst size is measured in bytes in addition to the burst size.
  A zero excess burst size indicates that no excess burst is allowed.

4.2.  RSVP traffic profiles

  RSVP admission policy can condition the decision whether to accept or
  deny an RSVP request based on the traffic specification of the flow
  (TSPEC) or the amount of QoS resources requested (FLOWSPEC).  The
  admission decision can be based on matching individual RSVP requests
  against a traffic profile or by matching the aggregated sum of all
  FLOWSPECs (TSPECs) currently admitted, as determined by the
  qpAdmissionScope property in an associated
  QoSPolicyRSVPAdmissionAction.

  The QoSPolicyIntservTrfcProf class models both such traffic profiles.
  This class has the following properties:

     1.  Token Rate (r) measured in bits/sec
     2.  Peak Rate (p) measured in bits/sec
     3.  Bucket Size (b) measured in bytes
     4.  Min Policed unit (m) measured in bytes
     5.  Max packet size (M) measured in bytes
     6.  Resv Rate (R) measured in bits/sec
     7.  Slack term (s) measured in microseconds

  The first five parameters are the traffic specification parameters
  used in the Integrated Service architecture ([INTSERV]).  These
  parameters are used to define a sender TSPEC as well as a FLOWSPEC
  for the Controlled-Load service [CL].  For a definition and full
  explanation of their meanings, please refer to [RSVP-IS].

  Parameters 6 and 7 are the additional parameters used for
  specification of the Guaranteed Service FLOWSPEC [GS].

  A partial order is defined between TSPECs (and FLOWSPECs).  The TSPEC
  A is larger than the TSPEC B if and only if rA>rB, pA>pB, bA>bB,
  mA<mB and MA>MB.  A TSPEC (FLOWSPEC) measured against a traffic
  profile uses the same ordering rule.  An RSVP message is accepted
  only if its TSPEC (FLOWSPEC) is either smaller or equal to the
  traffic profile.  Only parameters specified in the traffic profile
  are compared.

  The GS FLOWSPEC is compared against the rate R and the slack term s.
  The term R should not be larger than the traffic profile R parameter,
  while the FLOWSPEC slack term should not be smaller than that
  specified in the slack term.





Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  TSPECs as well as FLOWSPECs can be added.  The sum of two TSPECs is
  computed by summing the rate r, the peak rate p, the bucket size b,
  and by taking the minimum value of the minimum policed unit m and the
  maximum value of the maximum packet size M.  GS FLOWSPECs are summed
  by adding the Resv rate and minimizing the slack term s.  These rules
  are used to compute the temporal state of admitted RSVP states
  matching the traffic class defined by the rule condition.  This state
  is compared with the traffic profile to arrive at an admission
  decision when the scope of the QoSPolicyRSVPAdmissionAction is set to
  'class'.

5.  Pre-Defined QoS-Related Variables

  Pre-defined variables are necessary for ensuring interoperability
  among policy servers and policy management tools from different
  vendors.  The purpose of this section is to define frequently used
  variables in QoS policy domains.

  Notice that this section only adds to the variable classes as defined
  in [PCIMe] and reuses the mechanism defined there.

  The QoS policy information model specifies a set of pre-defined
  variable classes to support a set of fundamental QoS terms that are
  commonly used to form conditions and actions and are missing from the
  [PCIMe]. Examples of these include RSVP related variables.  All
  variable classes defined in this document extend the
  QoSPolicyRSVPVariable class (defined in this document), which itself
  extends the PolicyImplictVariable class, defined in [PCIMe].
  Subclasses specify the data type and semantics of the policy
  variables.

  This document defines the following RSVP variable classes; for
  details, see their class definitions:

  RSVP related Variables:

  1.   QoSPolicyRSVPSourceIPv4Variable - The source IPv4 address of the
       RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH SENDER_TEMPLATE
       and RSVP RESV FILTER_SPEC [RSVP] objects.

  2.   QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationIPv4Variable - The destination port of
       the RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH and RESV
       SESSION [RSVP] objects (for IPv4 traffic).

  3.   QoSPolicyRSVPSourceIPv6Variable - The source IPv6 address of the
       RSVP signaled flow, as defied in the RSVP PATH SENDER_TEMPLATE
       and RSVP RESV FILTER_SPEC [RSVP] objects.




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  4.   QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationIPv6Variable - The destination port of
       the RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH and RESV
       SESSION [RSVP] objects (for IPv6 traffic).

  5.   QoSPolicyRSVPSourcePortVariable - The source port of the RSVP
       signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH SENDER_TEMPLATE and
       RSVP RESV FILTER_SPEC [RSVP] objects.

  6.   QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationPortVariable - The destination port of
       the RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH and RESV
       SESSION [RSVP] objects.

  7.   QoSPolicyRSVPIPProtocolVariable - The IP Protocol of the RSVP
       signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH and RESV SESSION
       [RSVP] objects.

  8.   QoSPolicyRSVPIPVersionVariable - The version of the IP addresses
       carrying the RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH and
       RESV SESSION [RSVP] objects.

  9.   QoSPolicyRSVPDCLASSVariable - The DSCP value as defined in the
       RSVP DCLASS [DCLASS] object.

  10.  QoSPolicyRSVPStyleVariable - The reservation style (FF, SE, WF)
       as defined in the RSVP RESV message [RSVP].

  11.  QoSPolicyRSVPIntServVariable - The type of Integrated Service
       (CL, GS, NULL) requested in the RSVP Reservation message, as
       defined in the FLOWSPEC RSVP Object [RSVP].

  12.  QoSPolicyRSVPMessageTypeVariable - The RSVP message type, either
       PATH, PATHTEAR, RESV, RESVTEAR, RESVERR, CONF or PATHERR [RSVP].

  13.  QoSPolicyRSVPPreemptionPriorityVariable - The RSVP reservation
       priority as defined in [RFC3181].

  14.  QoSPolicyRSVPPreemptionDefPriorityVariable - The RSVP preemption
       reservation defending priority as defined in [RFC3181].

  15.  QoSPolicyRSVPUserVariable - The ID of the user that initiated
       the flow as defined in the User Locator string in the Identity
       Policy Object [RFC3182].

  16.  QoSPolicyRSVPApplicationVariable - The ID of the application
       that generated the flow as defined in the application locator
       string in the Application policy object [RFC2872].





Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  17.  QoSPolicyRSVPAuthMethodVariable - The RSVP Authentication type
       used in the Identity Policy Object [RFC3182].

  Each class restricts the possible value types associated with a
  specific variable.  For example, the QoSPolicyRSVPSourcePortVariable
  class is used to define the source port of the RSVP signaled flow.
  The value associated with this variable is of type
  PolicyIntegerValue.

6.  QoS Related Values

  Values are used in the information model as building blocks for the
  policy conditions and policy actions, as described in [PCIM] and
  [PCIMe].  This section defines a set of auxiliary values that are
  used for QoS policies as well as other policy domains.

  All value classes extend the PolicyValue class [PCIMe].  The
  subclasses specify specific data/value types that are not defined in
  [PCIMe].

  This document defines the following two subclasses of the PolicyValue
  class:

  QoSPolicyDNValue          This class is used to represent a single or
                            set of Distinguished Name [DNDEF] values,
                            including wildcards.  A Distinguished Name
                            is a name that can be used as a key to
                            retrieve an object from a directory
                            service.  This value can be used in
                            comparison to reference values carried in
                            RSVP policy objects, as specified in
                            [RFC3182].  This class is defined in
                            Section 8.31.

  QoSPolicyAttributeValue   A condition term uses the form "Variable
                            matches Value", and an action term uses the
                            form "set Variable to Value" ([PCIMe]).
                            This class is used to represent a single or
                            set of property values for the "Value" term
                            in either a condition or an action. This
                            value can be used in conjunction with
                            reference values carried in RSVP objects,
                            as specified in [RFC3182].  This class is
                            defined in section 8.12.

  The property name is used to specify which of the properties in the
  QoSPolicyAttributeValue class instance is being used in the condition
  or action term.  The value of this property or properties will then



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 42]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  be retrieved.  In the case of a condition, a match (which is
  dependent on the property name) will be used to see if the condition
  is satisfied or not.  In the case of an action, the semantics are
  instead "set the variable to this value".

  For example, suppose the "user" objects in the organization include
  several properties, among them:

     - First Name
     - Last Name
     - Login Name
     - Department
     - Title

  A simple condition could be constructed to identify flows by their
  RSVP user carried policy object.  The simple condition: Last Name =
  "Smith" to identify a user named Bill would be constructed in the
  following way:

     A SimplePolicyCondition [PCIMe] would aggregate a
     QoSPolicyRSVPUserVariable [QPIM] object, via the
     PolicyVariableInSimplePolicyCondition [PCIMe] aggregation.

  The implicit value associated with this condition is created in the
  following way:

     A QoSPolicyAttributeValue object would be aggregated to the simple
     condition object via a PolicyValueInSimplePolicyCondition [PCIMe].
     The QoSPolicyAttributeValue attribute qpAttributeName would be set
     to "last name" and the qpAttributeValueList would be set to
     "Smith".

  Another example is a condition that has to do with the user's
  organizational department.  It can be constructed in the exact same
  way, by changing the QoSPolicyAttributeValue attribute
  qpAttributeName to "Department" and the qpAttributeValueList would be
  set to the particular value that is to be matched (e.g.,
  "engineering" or "customer support").  The logical condition would
  than be evaluated to true if the user belong to either the
  engineering department or the customer support.

  Notice that many multiple-attribute objects require the use of the
  QoSPolicyAttributeValue class to specify exactly which of its
  attributes should be used in the condition match operation.







Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 43]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


7.  Class Definitions: Association Hierarchy

  The following sections define associations that are specified by
  QPIM.

7.1.  The Association "QoSPolicyTrfcProfInAdmissionAction"

  This association links a QoSPolicyTrfcProf object (defined in section
  8.9), modeling a specific traffic profile, to a
  QoSPolicyAdmissionAction object (defined in section 8.2).  The class
  definition for this association is as follows:

  NAME              QoSPolicyTrfcProfInAdmissionAction
  DESCRIPTION       A class representing the association between a
                    QoS admission action and its traffic profile.
  DERIVED FROM      Dependency (See [PCIM])
  ABSTRACT          FALSE
  PROPERTIES        Antecedent[ref QoSPolicyAdmissionAction [0..n]]
                    Dependent[ref QoSPolicyTrfcProf [1..1]]

7.1.1.  The Reference "Antecedent"

  This property is inherited from the Dependency association, defined
  in [PCIM].  Its type is overridden to become an object reference to a
  QoSPolicyAdmissionAction object.  This represents the "independent"
  part of the association.  The [0..n] cardinality indicates that any
  number of QoSPolicyAdmissionAction object(s) may use a given
  QoSPolicyTrfcProf.

7.1.2.  The Reference "Dependent"

  This property is inherited from the Dependency association, and is
  overridden to become an object reference to a QoSPolicyTrfcProf
  object.  This represents a specific traffic profile that is used by
  any number of QoSPolicyAdmissionAction objects.  The [1..1]
  cardinality means that exactly one object of the QoSPolicyTrfcProf
  can be used by a given QoSPolicyAddmissionAction.

7.2.  The Association "PolicyConformAction"

  This association links a policing action with an object defining an
  action to be applied to conforming traffic relative to the associated
  traffic profile.  The class definition for this association is as
  follows:







Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 44]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  NAME              PolicyConformAction
  DESCRIPTION       A class representing the association between a
                    policing action and the action that should be
                    applied to traffic conforming to an associated
                    traffic profile.
  DERIVED FROM      Dependency (see [PCIM])
  ABSTRACT          FALSE
  PROPERTIES        Antecedent[ref QoSPolicyPoliceAction[0..n]]
                    Dependent[ref PolicyAction [1..1]]

7.2.1.  The Reference "Antecedent"

  This property is inherited from the Dependency association.  Its type
  is overridden to become an object reference to a
  QoSPolicyPoliceAction object.  This represents the "independent" part
  of the association.  The [0..n] cardinality indicates that any number
  of QoSPolicyPoliceAction objects may be given the same action to be
  executed as the conforming action.

7.2.2.  The Reference "Dependent"

  This property is inherited from the Dependency association, and is
  overridden to become an object reference to a PolicyAction object.
  This represents a specific policy action that is used by a given
  QoSPolicyPoliceAction.  The [1..1] cardinality means that exactly one
  policy action  can be used as the "conform" action for a
  QoSPolicyPoliceAction.  To execute more than one conforming action,
  use the PolicyCompoundAction class to model the conforming action.

7.3.  The Association "QoSPolicyExceedAction"

  This association links a policing action with an object defining an
  action to be applied to traffic exceeding the associated traffic
  profile.  The class definition for this association is as follows:

  NAME              QoSPolicyExceedAction
  DESCRIPTION       A class representing the association between a
                    policing action and the action that should be
                    applied to traffic exceeding an associated traffic
                    profile.
  DERIVED FROM      Dependency (see [PCIM])
  ABSTRACT          FALSE
  PROPERTIES        Antecedent[ref QoSPolicePoliceAction[0..n]]
                    Dependent[ref PolicyAction [1..1]]







Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 45]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


7.3.1.  The Reference "Antecedent"

  This property is inherited from the Dependency association.  Its type
  is overridden to become an object reference to a
  QoSPolicyPoliceAction object.  This represents the "independent" part
  of the association.  The [0..n] cardinality indicates that any number
  of QoSPolicyPoliceAction objects may be given the same action to be
  executed as the exceeding action.

7.3.2.  The Reference "Dependent"

  This property is inherited from the Dependency association, and is
  overridden to become an object reference to a PolicyAction object.
  This represents a specific policy action that is used by a given
  QoSPolicyPoliceAction.  The [1..1] cardinality means that a exactly
  one policy action can be used as the "exceed" action by a
  QoSPolicyPoliceAction.  To execute more than one conforming action,
  use the PolicyCompoundAction class to model the exceeding action.

7.4.  The Association "PolicyViolateAction"

  This association links a policing action with an object defining an
  action to be applied to traffic violating the associated traffic
  profile.  The class definition for this association is as follows:

  NAME              PolicyViolateAction
  DESCRIPTION       A class representing the association between
                    a policing action and the action that should be
                    applied to traffic violating an associated traffic
                    profile.
  DERIVED FROM      Dependency (see [PCIM])
  ABSTRACT          FALSE
  PROPERTIES        Antecedent[ref QoSPolicePoliceAction[0..n]]
                    Dependent[ref PolicyAction [1..1]]

7.4.1.  The Reference "Antecedent"

  This property is inherited from the Dependency association.  Its type
  is overridden to become an object reference to a
  QoSPolicyPoliceAction object.  This represents the "independent" part
  of the association.  The [0..n] cardinality indicates that any number
  of QoSPolicyPoliceAction objects may be given the same action to be
  executed as the violating action.








Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 46]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


7.4.2.  The Reference "Dependent"

  This property is inherited from the Dependency association, and is
  overridden to become an object reference to a PolicyAction object.
  This represents a specific policy action that is used by a given
  QoSPolicyPoliceAction.  The [1..1] cardinality means that exactly one
  policy action can be used as the "violate" action by a
  QoSPolicyPoliceAction.  To execute more than one violating action,
  use the PolicyCompoundAction class to model the conforming action.

7.5.  The Aggregation "QoSPolicyRSVPVariableInRSVPSimplePolicyAction"

  A simple RSVP policy action is represented as a pair {variable,
  value}. This aggregation provides the linkage between a
  QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction instance and a single
  QoSPolicyRSVPVariable.  The aggregation
  PolicyValueInSimplePolicyAction links the QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction
  to a single PolicyValue.

  The class definition for this aggregation is as follows:

  NAME             QoSPolicyRSVPVariableInRSVPSimplePolicyAction
  DERIVED FROM     PolicyVariableInSimplePolicyAction
  ABSTRACT         FALSE
  PROPERTIES       GroupComponent[ref QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction
                     [0..n]]
                   PartComponent[ref QoSPolicyRSVPVariable [1..1] ]

7.5.1.  The Reference "GroupComponent"

  The reference property "GroupComponent" is inherited from
  PolicyComponent, and overridden to become an object reference to a
  QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction that contains exactly one
  QoSPolicyRSVPVariable.  Note that for any single instance of the
  aggregation class QoSPolicyRSVPVariableInRSVPSimplePolicyAction, this
  property is single-valued.  The [0..n] cardinality indicates that
  there may be 0, 1, or more QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction objects that
  contain any given RSVP variable object.

7.5.2.  The Reference "PartComponent"

  The reference property "PartComponent" is inherited from
  PolicyComponent, and overridden to become an object reference to a
  QoSPolicyRSVPVariable that is defined within the scope of a
  QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction.  Note that for any single instance of the
  association class QoSPolicyRSVPVariableInRSVPSimplePolicyAction, this
  property (like all reference properties) is single-valued.  The




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 47]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  [1..1] cardinality indicates that a
  QoSPolicyRSVPVariableInRSVPSimplePolicyAction must have exactly one
  RSVP variable defined within its scope in order to be meaningful.

8.  Class Definitions: Inheritance Hierarchy

  The following sections define object classes that are specified by
  QPIM.

8.1.  The Class QoSPolicyDiscardAction

  This class is used to specify that packets should be discarded.  This
  is the same as stating that packets should be denied forwarding.  The
  class definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyDiscardAction
  DESCRIPTION    This action specifies that packets should be
                 discarded.
  DERIVED FROM   PolicyAction (defined in [PCIM])
  ABSTRACT       FALSEFALSE
  PROPERTIES     None

8.2.  The Class QoSPolicyAdmissionAction

  This class is the base class for performing admission decisions based
  on a comparison of a meter measuring the temporal behavior of a flow
  or a set of flow with a traffic profile.  The qpAdmissionScope
  property controls whether the comparison is done per flow or per
  class (of flows).  Only packets that conform to the traffic profile
  are admitted for further processing; other packets are discarded.
  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyAdmissionAction
  DESCRIPTION    This action controls admission decisions based on
                 comparison of a meter to a traffic profile.
  DERIVED FROM   PolicyAction (defined in [PCIM])
  ABSTRACT       FALSEFALSE
  PROPERTIES     qpAdmissionScope

8.2.1.  The Property qpAdmissionScope

  This attribute specifies whether the admission decision is done per
  flow or per the entire class of flows defined by the rule condition.
  If the scope is "flow", the actual or requested rate of each flow is
  compared against the traffic profile.  If the scope is set to
  "class", the aggregate actual or requested rate of all flows matching
  the rule condition is measured against the traffic profile.  The
  property is defined as follows:



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 48]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  NAME         qpAdmissionScope
  DESCRIPTION  This property specifies whether the admission decision
               is done per flow or per the entire class of flows.
  SYNTAX       Integer
  VALUE        This is an enumerated integer.  A value of 0 specifies
               that admission is done on a per-flow basis, and a value
               of 1 specifies that admission is done on a per-class
               basis.

8.3.  The Class QoSPolicyPoliceAction

  This is used for defining policing actions (i.e., those actions that
  restrict traffic based on a comparison with a traffic profile).
  Using the three associations QoSPolicyConformAction,
  QoSPolicyExceedAction and QoSPolicyViolateAction, it is possible to
  specify different actions to take based on whether the traffic is
  conforming, exceeding, or violating a traffic profile.  The traffic
  profile is specified in a subclass of the QoSPolicyTrfcProf class.
  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME         QoSPolicyPoliceAction
  DESCRIPTION  This action controls the operation of policers.  The
               rate of flows is measured against a traffic profile.
               The actions that need to be performed on conforming,
               exceeding and violating traffic are indicated using
               the conform, exceed and violate action associations.
  DERIVED FROM QoSPolicyAdmissionAction (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT     FALSEFALSE
  PROPERTIES   None

8.4.  The Class  QoSPolicyShapeAction

  This class is used for defining shaping actions.  Shapers are used to
  delay some or all of the packets in a traffic stream in order to
  bring a particular traffic stream into compliance with a given
  traffic profile.  The traffic profile is specified in a subclass of
  the QoSPolicyTrfcProf class.  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME         QoSPolicyShapeAction
  DESCRIPTION  This action indicate that traffic should be shaped to be
               conforming with a traffic profile.
  DERIVED FROM QoSPolicyAdmissionAction (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT     FALSEFALSE
  PROPERTIES   None







Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 49]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


8.5.  The Class QoSPolicyRSVPAdmissionAction

  This class determines whether to accept or reject a given RSVP
  request by comparing the RSVP request's TSPEC or RSPEC parameters
  against the associated traffic profile and/or by enforcing the pre-
  set maximum sessions limit.  The traffic profile is specified in the
  QoSPolicyIntServTrfcProf class.  This class inherits the
  qpAdmissionScope property from its superclass.  This property
  specifies whether admission should be done on a per-flow or per-class
  basis.  If the traffic profile is not larger than or equal to the
  requested reservation, or to the sum of the admitted reservation
  merged with the requested reservation, the result is a deny decision.
  If no traffic profile is specified, the assumption is that all
  traffic can be admitted.

  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME         QoSPolicyRSVPAdmissionAction
  DESCRIPTION  This action controls the admission of RSVP requests.
               Depending on the scope, either a single RSVP request or
               the total admitted RSVP requests matching the conditions
               are compared against a traffic profile.
  DERIVED FROM QoSPolicyAdmissionAction (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT     FALSEFALSE
  PROPERTIES   qpRSVPWarnOnly, qpRSVPMaxSessions

8.5.1.  The Property qpRSVPWarnOnly

  This property is applicable when fulfilling ("admitting") an RSVP
  request would violate the policer (traffic profile) limits or when
  the maximum number session would be exceeded (or both).

  When this property is set to TRUE, the RSVP request is admitted in
  spite of the violation, but an RSVP error message carrying a warning
  is sent to the originator (sender or receiver).  When set to FALSE,
  the request would be denied and an error message would be sent back
  to the originator.  So the meaning of the qpWarnOnly flag is: Based
  on property's value (TRUE or FALSE), determine whether to admit but
  warn the originator that the request is in violation or to deny the
  request altogether (and send back an error).

  Specifically, a PATHERR (in response to a Path message) or a RESVERR
  (in response of a RESV message) will be sent.  This follows the COPS
  for RSVP send error flag in the Decision Flags object.  This property
  is defined as follows:






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 50]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  NAME      qpRSVPWarnOnly
  SYNTAX    Boolean
  Default   FALSE
  VALUE     The value TRUE means that the request should be admitted
            AND an RSVP warning message should be sent to the
            originator.  The value of FALSE means that the request
            should be not admitted and an appropriate error message
            should be sent back to the originator of the request.

8.5.2.  The Property qpRSVPMaxSessions

  This attribute is used to limit the total number of RSVP requests
  admitted for the specified class of traffic.  For this property to be
  meaningful, the qpAdmissionScope property must be set to class.  The
  definition of this property is as follows:

  NAME     qpRSVPMaxSessions
  SYNTAX   Integer
  VALUE    Must be greater than 0.

8.6.  The Class QoSPolicyPHBAction

  This class is a base class that is used to define the per-hop
  behavior that is to be assigned to behavior aggregates.  It defines a
  common property, qpMaxPacketSize, for use by its subclasses
  (QoSPolicyBandwidthAction and QoSPolicyCongestionControlAction).  The
  class definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyPHBAction
  DESCRIPTION    This action controls the Per-Hop-Behavior provided to
                 behavior aggregates.
  DERIVED FROM   PolicyAction  (defined in [PCIM])
  ABSTRACT       TRUE
  PROPERTIES     qpMaxPacketSize

8.6.1.  The Property qpMaxPacketSize

  This property specifies the maximum packet size in bytes, of packets
  in the designated flow.  This attribute is used in translation of
  QPIM attributes to QoS mechanisms used within a PEP.  For example,
  queue length may be measured in bytes, while the minimum number of
  packets that should be kept in a PEP is defined within QPIM in number
  of packets.  This property is defined as follows:

  NAME       qpMaxPacketSize
  SYNTAX     Integer
  Value      Must be greater than 0




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 51]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


8.7.  The Class QoSPolicyBandwidthAction

  This class is used to control the bandwidth, delay, and forwarding
  behavior of a PHB.  Its class definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyBandwidthAction
  DESCRIPTION    This action controls the bandwidth, delay, and
                 forwarding characteristics of the PHB.
  DERIVED FROM   QoSPolicyPBHAction (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     qpForwardingPriority, qpBandwidthUnits,
                 qpMinBandwdith, qpMaxBandwidth, qpMaxDelay,
                 qpMaxJitter, qpFairness

8.7.1.  The Property qpForwardingPriority

  This property defines the forwarding priority for this set of flows.
  A non-zero value indicates that preemptive forwarding is required.
  Higher values represent higher forwarding priority.  This property is
  defined as follows:

  NAME        qpForwardingPriority
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       Must be non-negative.  The value 0 means that preemptive
              forwarding is not required.  A positive value indicates
              the priority that is to be assigned for this (set of)
              flow(s).  Larger values represent higher priorities.

8.7.2.  The Property qpBandwidthUnits

  This property defines the units that the properties qpMinBandwidth
  and qpMaxBandwidth have.  Bandwidth can either be defined in bits/sec
  or as a percentage of the available bandwidth or scheduler resources.
  This property is defined as follows:

  NAME        qpBandwidthUnits
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       Two values are possible.  The value of 0 is used to
              specify units of bits/sec, while the value of 1 is used
              to specify units as a percentage of the available
              bandwidth.  If this property indicates that the bandwidth
              units are percentages, then each of the bandwidth
              properties expresses a whole-number percentage, and hence
              its maximum value is 100.







Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 52]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


8.7.3.  The Property qpMinBandwidth

  This property defines the minimum bandwidth that should be reserved
  for this class of traffic.  Both relative (i.e., a percentage of the
  bandwidth) and absolute (i.e., bits/second) values can be specified
  according to the value of the qpBandwidthUnits property.  This
  property is defined as follows:

  NAME        qpMinBandwidth
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       The value must be greater than 0.  If the property
              qpMaxBandwidth is defined, then the value of
              qpMinBandwidth must be less than or equal to the value of
              qpMaxBandwidth.

8.7.4.  The Property qpMaxBandwidth

  This property defines the maximum bandwidth that should be allocated
  to this class of traffic.  Both relative (i.e., a percentage of the
  bandwidth)and absolute (i.e., bits/second) values can be specified
  according to the value of the qpBandwidthUnits property.  This
  property is defined as follows:

  NAME        qpMaxBandwidth
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       The value must be greater than 0.  If the property
              qpMaxBandwidth is defined, then the value of
              qpMinBandwidth must be less than or equal to the value of
              qpMaxBandwidth.

8.7.5.  The Property qpMaxDelay

  This property defines the maximal per-hop delay that traffic of this
  class should experience while being forwarded through this hop.  The
  maximum delay is measured in microseconds.  This property is defined
  as follows:

  NAME        qpMaxDelay
  SYNTAX      Integer (microseconds)
  VALUE       The value must be greater than 0.

8.7.6.  The Property qpMaxJitter

  This property defines the maximal per-hop delay variance that traffic
  of this class should experience while being forwarded through this
  hop. The maximum jitter is measured in microseconds.  This property
  is defined as follows:




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 53]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  NAME        qpMaxJitter
  SYNTAX      Integer (microseconds)
  VALUE       The value must be greater than 0.

8.7.7.  The Property qpFairness

  This property defines whether fair queuing is required for this class
  of traffic.  This property is defined as follows:

  NAME        qpFairness
  SYNTAX      Boolean
  VALUE       The value of FALSE means that fair queuing is not
              required for this class of traffic, while the value of
              TRUE means that fair queuing is required for this class
              of traffic.

8.8.  The Class QoSPolicyCongestionControlAction

  This class is used to control the characteristics of the congestion
  control algorithm being used.  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME         QoSPolicyCongestionControlAction
  DESCRIPTION  This action control congestion control characteristics
               of the PHB.
  DERIVED FROM QoSPolicyPBHAction (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT     FALSE
  PROPERTIES   qpQueueSizeUnits, qpQueueSize, qpDropMethod,
               qpDropThresholdUnits, qpDropMinThresholdValue,
               qpDropMaxThresholdValue

8.8.1.  The property qpQueueSizeUnits

  This property specifies the units in which the qpQueueSize attribute
  is measured.  The queue size is measured either in number of packets
  or in units of time.  The time interval specifies the time needed to
  transmit all packets within the queue if the link speed is dedicated
  entirely to transmission of packets within this queue.  The property
  definition is:

  NAME        qpQueueSizeUnits
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This property can have two values.  If the value is set
              to 0, then the unit of measurement is number of packets.
              If the value is set to 1, then the unit of measurement is
              milliseconds.






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 54]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


8.8.2.  The Property qpQueueSize

  This property specifies the maximum queue size in packets or in
  milliseconds, depending on the value of the qpQueueSizeUnits (0
  specifies packets, and 1 specifies milliseconds).  This property is
  defined as follows:

  NAME        qpQueueSize
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be greater than 0.

8.8.3.  The Property qpDropMethod

  This property specifies the congestion control drop algorithm that
  should be used for this type of traffic.  This property is defined as
  follows:

  NAME        qpDropMethod
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUES      Three values are currently defined.  The value 0
              specifies a random drop algorithm, the value 1 specifies
              a tail drop algorithm, and the value 2 specifies a head
              drop algorithm.

8.8.4.  The Property qpDropThresholdUnits

  This property specifies the units in which the two properties
  qpDropMinThresholdValue and qpDropMaxThresholdValue are measured.
  Thresholds can be measured either in packets or as a percentage of
  the available queue sizes.  This property is defined as follows:

  NAME        qpDropThresholdUnits
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUES      Three values are defined.  The value 0 defines the units
              as number of packets, the value 1 defines the units as a
              percentage of the queue size and the value 2 defines the
              units in milliseconds.  If this property indicates that
              the threshold units are percentages, then each of the
              threshold properties expresses a whole-number percentage,
              and hence its maximum value is 100.

8.8.5.  The Property qpDropMinThresholdValue

  This property specifies the minimum number of queuing and buffer
  resources that should be reserved for this class of flows.  The
  threshold can be specified as either relative (i.e., a percentage) or
  absolute (i.e., number of packets or millisecond) value according to
  the value of the qpDropThresholdUnits property.  If this property



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 55]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  specifies a value of 5 packets, then enough buffer and queuing
  resources should be reserved to hold 5 packets before running the
  specified congestion control drop algorithm.  This property is
  defined as follows:

  NAME        qpDropMinThresholdValue
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be greater than or equal to 0.  If the
              property qpDropMaxThresholdValue is defined, then the
              value of the qpDropMinThresholdValue property must be
              less than or equal to the value of the
              qpDropMaxThresholdValue property.

8.8.6.  The Property qpDropMaxThresholdValue

  This property specifies the maximum number of queuing and buffer
  resources that should be reserved for this class of flows.  The
  threshold can be specified as either relative (i.e., a percentage) or
  absolute (i.e., number of packets or milliseconds) value according to
  the value of the qpDropThresholdUnits property.  Congestion Control
  droppers should not keep more packets than the value specified in
  this property.  Note, however, that some droppers may calculate queue
  occupancy averages, and therefore the actual maximum queue resources
  should be larger.  This property is defined as follows:

  NAME        qpDropMaxThresholdValue
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be greater than or equal to 0.  If the
              property qpDropMinThresholdValue is defined, then the
              value of the qpDropMinThresholdValue property must be
              less than or equal to the value of the
              qpDropMaxThresholdValue property.

8.9.  Class QoSPolicyTrfcProf

  This is an abstract base class that models a traffic profile.
  Traffic profiles specify the maximum rate parameters used within
  admission decisions.  The association
  QoSPolicyTrfcProfInAdmissionAction binds the admission decision to
  the traffic profile.  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME          QoSPolicyTrfcProf
  DERIVED FROM  Policy (defined in [PCIM])
  ABSTRACT      TRUE
  PROPERTIES    None






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 56]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


8.10.  Class QoSPolicyTokenBucketTrfcProf

  This class models a two- or three-level Token Bucket traffic profile.
  Additional profiles can be modeled by cascading multiple instances of
  this class (e.g., by connecting the output of one instance to the
  input of another instance).  This traffic profile carries the policer
  or shaper rate values to be enforced on a flow or a set of flows.
  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME          QoSPolicyTokenBucketTrfcProf
  DERIVED FROM  QoSPolicyTrfcProf (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT      FALSE
  PROPERTIES    qpTBRate, qpTBNormalBurst, qpTBExcessBurst

8.10.1.  The Property qpTBRate

  This is a non-negative integer that defines the token rate in
  kilobits per second.  A rate of zero means that all packets will be
  out of profile.  This property is defined as follows:

  NAME        qpTBRate
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be greater than to 0

8.10.2.  The Property qpTBNormalBurst

  This property is an integer that defines the normal size of a burst
  measured in bytes.  This property is defined as follows:

  NAME        qpTBNormalBurst
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be greater than to 0

8.10.3.  The Property qpTBExcessBurst

  This property is an integer that defines the excess burst size
  measured in bytes.  This property is defined as follows:

  NAME        qpTBExcessBurst
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be greater than or equal to
              qpTBNormalBurst

8.11.  Class QoSPolicyIntServTrfcProf

  This class represents an IntServ traffic profile.  Values of IntServ
  traffic profiles are compared against Traffic specification (TSPEC)
  and QoS Reservation (FLOWSPEC) requests carried in RSVP requests.



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 57]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME          QoSPolicyIntServTrfcProf
  DERIVED FROM  QoSPolicyTrfcProf (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT      FALSE
  PROPERTIES    qpISTokenRate, qpISPeakRate, qpISBucketSize,
                qpISResvRate, qpISResvSlack, qpISMinPolicedUnit,
                qpISMaxPktSize

8.11.1.  The Property qpISTokenRate

  This property is a non-negative integer that defines the token rate
  parameter, measured in kilobits per second.  This property is defined
  as follows:

  NAME        qpISTokenRate
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be greater than or equal to 0

8.11.2.  The Property qpISPeakRate

  This property is a non-negative integer that defines the peak rate
  parameter, measured in kilobits per second.  This property is defined
  as follows:

  NAME        qpISPeakRate
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be greater than or equal to 0

8.11.3.  The Property qpISBucketSize

  This property is a non-negative integer that defines the token bucket
  size parameter, measured in bytes.  This property is defined as
  follows:

  NAME        qpISBucketSize
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be greater than or equal to 0

8.11.4.  The Property qpISResvRate

  This property is a non-negative integer that defines the reservation
  rate (R-Spec) in the RSVP guaranteed service reservation.  It is
  measured in kilobits per second.  This property is defined as
  follows:






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 58]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  NAME        qpISResvRate
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be greater than or equal to 0

8.11.5.  The Property qpISResvSlack

  This property is a non-negative integer that defines the RSVP slack
  term in the RSVP guaranteed service reservation.  It is measured in
  microseconds.  This property is defined as follows:

  NAME        qpISResvSlack
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be greater than or equal to 0

8.11.6.  The Property qpISMinPolicedUnit

  This property is a non-negative integer that defines the minimum RSVP
  policed unit, measured in bytes.  This property is defined as
  follows:

  NAME        qpISMinPolicedUnit
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be greater than or equal to 0

8.11.7.  The Property qpISMaxPktSize

  This property is a positive integer that defines the maximum allowed
  packet size for RSVP messages, measured in bytes.  This property is
  defined as follows:

  NAME        qpISMaxPktSize
  SYNTAX      Integer
  VALUE       This value must be a positive integer, denoting the
              number of bytes in the largest payload packet of an RSVP
              signaled flow or class.

8.12.  The Class QoSPolicyAttributeValue

  This class can be used for representing an indirection in variable
  and value references either in a simple condition ("<x> match <y>")
  or a simple action ("<x> = <y>").  In both cases, <x> and <y> are
  known as the variable and the value of either the condition or
  action.  The value of the properties qpAttributeName and
  qpAttributeValueList are used to substitute <x> and <y> in the
  condition or action respectively.






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 59]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  The substitution is done as follows: The value of the property
  qpAttributeName is used to substitute <x> and the value of the
  property qpAttributeValueList is used to substitute <y>.

  Once the substitution is done, the condition can be evaluated and the
  action can be performed.

  For example, suppose we want to define a condition over a user name
  of the form "user == 'Smith'", using the QoSPolicyRSVPUserVariable
  class.  The user information in the RSVP message provides a DN.  The
  DN points to a user objects holding many attributes.  If the relevant
  attribute is "last name", we would use the QoSPolicyAttributeValue
  class with qpAttributeName = "Last Name", qpAttributeValueList =
  {"Smith"}.

  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyAttributeValue
  DERIVED FROM   PolicyValue (defined in [PCIMe])
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     qpAttributeName, qpAttributeValueList

8.12.1.  The Property qpAttributeName

  This property carries the name of the attribute that is to be used to
  substitute <x> in a simple condition or simple condition of the forms
  "<x> match <y>" or "<x> = <y>" respectively.  This property is
  defined as follows:

  NAME       qpAttributeName
  SYNTAX     String

8.12.2.  The Property qpAttributeValueList

  This property carries a list of values that is to be used to
  substitute <y> in a simple condition or simple action of the forms
  "<x> match <y>" or "<x> = <y>" respectively.

  This property is defined as follows:

  NAME       qpAttributeValueList
  SYNTAX     String

8.13.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPVariable"

  This is an abstract class that serves as the base class for all
  implicit variables that have to do with RSVP conditioning.  The class
  definition is as follows:



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 60]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  NAME           QoSPolicyRSVPVariable
  DESCRIPTION    An abstract base class used to build other classes
                 that specify different attributes of an RSVP request
  DERIVED FROM   PolicyImplicitVariable (defined in [PCIMe])
  ABSTRACT       TRUE
  PROPERTIES     None

8.14.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPSourceIPv4Variable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the source IPv4 address of the
  RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH SENDER_TEMPLATE and
  RSVP RESV FILTER_SPEC [RSVP] objects.  The class definition is as
  follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyRSVPSourceIPv4Variable
  DESCRIPTION    The source IPv4 address of the RSVP signaled flow, as
                 defined in the RSVP PATH SENDER_TEMPLATE and RSVP RESV
                 FILTER_SPEC [RSVP] objects.

                 ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolicyIPv4AddrValue

  DERIVED FROM   QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     None

8.15.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationIPv4Variable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the destination IPv4 address
  of the RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH
  SENDER_TEMPLATE and RSVP RESV FILTER_SPEC [RSVP] objects.  The class
  definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationIPv4Variable
  DESCRIPTION    The destination IPv4 address of the RSVP signaled
                 flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH and RESV SESSION
                 [RSVP] objects.

                 ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolicyIPv4AddrValue

  DERIVED FROM   QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     None









Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 61]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


8.16.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPSourceIPv6Variable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the source IPv6 address of the
  RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH SENDER_TEMPLATE and
  RSVP RESV FILTER_SPEC [RSVP] objects.  The class definition is as
  follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyRSVPSourceIPv6Variable
  DESCRIPTION    The source IPv6 address of the RSVP signaled flow, as
                 defined in the RSVP PATH SENDER_TEMPLATE and RSVP RESV
                 FILTER_SPEC [RSVP] objects.

                 ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolicyIPv6AddrValue

  DERIVED FROM   QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     None

8.17.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationIPv6Variable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the destination IPv6 address
  of the RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH
  SENDER_TEMPLATE and RSVP RESV FILTER_SPEC [RSVP] objects.  The class
  definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationIPv6Variable
  DESCRIPTION    The destination IPv6 address of the RSVP signaled
                 flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH and RESV SESSION
                 [RSVP] objects.

                 ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolicyIPv6AddrValue

  DERIVED FROM   QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     None

8.18.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPSourcePortVariable"

  This class contains the source port of the RSVP signaled flow, as
  defined in the RSVP PATH SENDER_TEMPLATE and RSVP RESV FILTER_SPEC
  [RSVP] objects.  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyRSVPSourcePortVariable
  DESCRIPTION    The source port of the RSVP signaled flow, as defined
                 in the RSVP PATH SENDER_TEMPLATE and RSVP RESV
                 FILTER_SPEC [RSVP] objects.

                 ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolicyIntegerValue (0..65535)



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 62]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  DERIVED FROM   QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     None

8.19.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationPortVariable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the destination port of the
  RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH SENDER_TEMPLATE and
  RSVP RESV FILTER_SPEC [RSVP] objects.  The class definition is as
  follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyRSVPDestinationPortVariable
  DESCRIPTION    The destination port of the RSVP signaled flow, as
                 defined in the RSVP PATH and RESV SESSION [RSVP]
                 objects.

                 ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolicyIntegerValue (0..65535)

  DERIVED FROM   QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     None

8.20.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPIPProtocolVariable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the IP Protocol number of the
  RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH and RESV SESSION
  [RSVP] objects.  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyRSVPIPProtocolVariable
  DESCRIPTION    The IP Protocol number of the RSVP signaled flow, as
                 defined in the RSVP PATH and RESV SESSION [RSVP]
                 objects.

                 ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolicyIntegerValue

  DERIVED FROM   QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     None

8.21.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPIPVersionVariable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the IP Protocol version number
  of the RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH and RESV
  SESSION [RSVP] objects.  The well-known version numbers are 4 and 6.
  This variable allows a policy definition of the type:

     "If IP version = IPv4 then ...".




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 63]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyRSVPIPVersionVariable
  DESCRIPTION    The IP version number of the IP Addresses carried the
                 RSVP signaled flow, as defined in the RSVP PATH and
                 RESV SESSION [RSVP] objects.

                 ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolciIntegerValue

  DERIVED FROM   QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     None

8.22.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPDCLASSVariable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the DSCP value as defined in
  the RSVP DCLASS [DCLASS] object.  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyRSVPDCLASSVariable
  DESCRIPTION    The DSCP value as defined in the RSVP DCLASS [DCLASS]
                 object.

                 ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolicyIntegerValue,
                                      PolicyBitStringValue

  DERIVED FROM   QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     None

8.23.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPStyleVariable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the reservation style as
  defined in the RSVP STYLE object in the RESV message [RSVP].  The
  class definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyRSVPStyleVariable
  DESCRIPTION    The reservation style as defined in the RSVP STYLE
                 object in the RESV message [RSVP].

                 ALLOWED VALUE TYPES:  PolicyBitStringValue,
                                       PolicyIntegerValue (Integer has
                                       an enumeration of
                                       { Fixed-Filter=1,
                                        Shared-Explicit=2,
                                        Wildcard-Filter=3}






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 64]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  DERIVED FROM   QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     None

8.24.  The Class "QoSPolicyIntServVariable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the Integrated Service
  requested in the RSVP Reservation message, as defined in the FLOWSPEC
  RSVP Object [RSVP].  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyRSVPIntServVariable
  DESCRIPTION    The integrated Service requested in the RSVP
                 Reservation message, as defined in the FLOWSPEC RSVP
                 Object [RSVP].

                ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolicyIntegerValue (An enumerated
                                     value of { CL=1 , GS=2, NULL=3}

  DERIVED FROM   QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     None

8.25.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPMessageTypeVariable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the RSVP message type, as
  defined in the RSVP message common header [RSVP] object.  The class
  definition is as follows:

  NAME          QoSPolicyRSVPMessageTypeVariable
  DESCRIPTION   The RSVP message type, as defined in the RSVP message
                common header [RSVP] object.

                ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: Integer (An enumerated value of
                                      {PATH=1 , PATHTEAR=2, RESV=3,
                                       RESVTEAR=4, RESVERR=5, CONF=6,
                                       PATHERR=7}

  DERIVED FROM  QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT      FALSE
  PROPERTIES    None

8.26.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPPreemptionPriorityVariable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the RSVP reservation priority,
  as defined in [RFC3181] object.  The class definition is as follows:

  NAME          QoSPolicyRSVPPreemptionPriorityVariable
  DESCRIPTION   The RSVP reservation priority as defined in [RFC3181].



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 65]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


                ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolicyIntegerValue

  DERIVED FROM  QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT      FALSE
  PROPERTIES    None

8.27.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPPreemptionDefPriorityVariable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the RSVP reservation defending
  priority, as defined in [RFC3181] object.  The class definition is as
  follows:

  NAME          QoSPolicyRSVPPreemptionDefPriorityVariable
  DESCRIPTION   The RSVP preemption reservation defending priority as
                defined in [RFC3181].

                ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolicyIntegerValue

  DERIVED FROM  QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT      FALSE
  PROPERTIES    None

8.28.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPUserVariable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the ID of the user that
  initiated the flow as defined in the User Locator string in the
  Identity Policy Object [RFC3182].  The class definition is as
  follows:

  NAME          QoSPolicyRSVPUserVariable
  DESCRIPTION   The ID of the user that initiated the flow as defined
                in the User Locator string in the Identity Policy
                Object [RFC3182].

                ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: QoSPolicyDNValue,
                                     PolicyStringValue,
                                     QoSPolicyAttributeValue

  DERIVED FROM  QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT      FALSE
  PROPERTIES    None

8.29.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPApplicationVariable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the ID of the application that
  generated the flow as defined in the application locator string in
  the Application policy object [RFC2872].  The class definition is as
  follows:



Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 66]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  NAME          QoSPolicyRSVPApplicationVariable
  DESCRIPTION   The ID of the application that generated the flow as
                defined in the application locator string in the
                Application policy object [RFC2872].

                ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: QoSPolicyDNValue,
                                     PolicyStringValue,
                                     QoSPolicyAttributeValue

  DERIVED FROM  QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT      FALSE
  PROPERTIES    None

8.30.  The Class "QoSPolicyRSVPAuthMethodVariable"

  This is a concrete class that contains the type of authentication
  used in the Identity Policy Object [RFC3182].  The class definition
  is as follows:

  NAME          QoSPolicyRSVPAuthMethodVariable
  DESCRIPTION   The RSVP Authentication type used in the Identity
                Policy Object [RFC3182].

                ALLOWED VALUE TYPES: PolicyIntegerValue (An enumeration
                                     of { NONE=0, PLAIN-TEXT=1,
                                     DIGITAL-SIG = 2, KERBEROS_TKT=3,
                                     X509_V3_CERT=4, PGP_CERT=5}

  DERIVED FROM  QoSPolicyRSVPVariable (defined in this document)
  ABSTRACT      FALSE
  PROPERTIES    None

8.31.  The Class QoSPolicyDNValue

  This class is used to represent a single or set of Distinguished Name
  [DNDEF] values, including wildcards.  A Distinguished Name is a name
  that can be used as a key to retrieve an object from a directory
  service. This value can be used in comparison to reference values
  carried in RSVP policy objects, as specified in [RFC3182].  The class
  definition is as follows:

  NAME           QoSPolicyDNValue
  DERIVED FROM   PolicyValue
  ABSTRACT       FALSE
  PROPERTIES     qpDNList






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 67]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


8.31.1.  The Property qpDNList

  This attribute provides an unordered list of strings, each
  representing a Distinguished Name (DN) with wildcards.  The format of
  a DN is defined in [DNDEF].  The asterisk character ("*") is used as
  wildcard for either a single attribute value or a wildcard for an
  RDN.  The order of RDNs is significant.  For example: A qpDNList
  attribute carrying the following value:

     "CN=*, OU=Sales, O=Widget Inc., *, C=US" matches:

     "CN=J. Smith, OU=Sales, O=Widget Inc, C=US"

  and also matches:

     "CN=J. Smith, OU=Sales, O=Widget Inc, L=CA, C=US".

  The attribute is defined as follows:

  NAME     qpDNList
  SYNTAX   List of Distinguished Names implemented as strings, each of
           which serves as a reference to another object.

8.32.  The Class QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction

  This action controls the content of RSVP messages and the way RSVP
  requests are admitted.  Depending on the value of its
  qpRSVPActionType property, this action directly translates into
  either a COPS Replace Decision or a COPS Stateless Decision, or both
  as defined in COPS for RSVP.  Only variables that are subclasses of
  the QoSPolicyRSVPVariable are allowed to be associated with this
  action.  The property definition is as follows:

  NAME          QoSPolicyRSVPSimpleAction
  DESCRIPTION   This action controls the content of RSVP messages and
                the way RSVP requests are admitted.
  DERIVED FROM  SimplePolicyAction (defined in [PCIMe])
  ABSTRACT      FALSE
  PROPERTIES    qpRSVPActionType

8.32.1.  The Property qpRSVPActionType

  This property is an enumerated integer denoting the type(s) of RSVP
  action.  The value 'REPLACE' denotes a COPS Replace Decision action.
  The value 'STATELESS' denotes a COPS Stateless Decision action.  The
  value REPLACEANDSTATELESS denotes both decision actions.  Refer to
  [RFC2749] for details.




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 68]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  NAME          qpRSVPActionType
  DESCRIPTION   This property specifies whether the action type is for
                COPS Replace, Stateless, or both types of decisions.
  SYNTAX        Integer
  VALUE         This is an enumerated integer.  A value of 0 specifies
                a COPS Replace decision.  A value of 1 specifies a COPS
                Stateless Decision.  A value of 2 specifies both COPS
                Replace and COPS Stateless decisions.

9.  Intellectual Property Rights Statement

  The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
  intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to
  pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
  this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
  might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it
  has made any effort to identify any such rights.  Information on the
  IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and
  standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11.

  Copies of claims of rights made available for publication and any
  assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
  attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of
  such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
  specification can be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.

  The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
  copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
  rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice
  this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF Executive
  Director.

10.  Acknowledgements

  The authors wish to thank the input of the participants of the Policy
  Framework working group, and especially the combined group of the
  PCIMe coauthors, Lee Rafalow, Andrea Westerinen, Ritu Chadha and
  Marcus Brunner.  In addition, we'd like to acknowledge the valuable
  contribution from Ed Ellesson, Joel Halpern and Mircea Pana.  Thank
  you all for your comments, critique, ideas and general contribution.

11.  Security Considerations

  The Policy Core Information Model [PCIM] describes the general
  security considerations related to the general core policy model.
  The extensions defined in this document do not introduce any
  additional considerations related to security.




Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 69]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


12.  References

12.1.  Normative References

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

  [PCIM]     Moore, B., Ellesson, E., Strassner, J. and A. Westerinen,
             "Policy Core Information Model -- Version 1
             Specification", RFC 3060, February 2001.

  [PCIMe]    Moore, B., Ed., "Policy Core Information Model
             Extensions", RFC 3460, January 2003.

12.2.  Informative References

  [TERMS]    Westerinen, A., Schnizlein, J., Strassner, J., Scherling,
             M., Quinn, B., Herzog, S., Huynh, A., Carlson, M., Perry,
             J. and M. Waldbusser, "Terminology for Policy-based
             Management", RFC 3198, November 2001.

  [DIFFSERV] Blake, S., Black, D., Carlson, M., Davies, E., Wang, Z.
             and W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated
             Services", RFC 2475, December 1998.

  [INTSERV]  Braden, R., Clark, D. and S. Shenker, "Integrated Services
             in the Internet Architecture: an Overview", RFC 1633, June
             1994.

  [RSVP]     Braden, R., Ed., Zhang, L., Berson, S.,  Herzog, S. and S.
             Jamin, "Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP) -- Version 1
             Functional Specification", RFC 2205, September 1997.

  [RFC2749]  Herzog, S., Ed., Boyle, J., Cohen, R., Durham, D., Rajan,
             R. and A. Sastry, "COPS usage for RSVP", RFC 2749, January
             2000.

  [RFC3181]  Herzog, S., "Signaled Preemption Priority Policy Element",
             RFC 3181, October 2001.

  [DIFF-MIB] Baker, F., Chan, K. and A. Smith, "Management Information
             Base for the Differentiated Services Architecture", RFC
             3289, May 2002.

  [AF]       Heinanen, J., Baker, F., Weiss, W. and J. Wroclawski,
             "Assured Forwarding PHB Group", RFC 2597, June 1999.





Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 70]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


  [CL]       Wroclawski, J., "Specification of the Controlled-Load
             Network Element Service", RFC 2211, September 1997.

  [RSVP-IS]  Wroclawski, J., "The Use of RSVP with IETF Integrated
             Services", RFC 2210, September 1997.

  [GS]       Shenker, S., Partridge, C. and R. Guerin, "Specification
             of the Guaranteed Quality of Service", RFC 2212, September
             1997.

  [DCLASS]   Bernet, Y., "Format of the RSVP DCLASS Object", RFC 2996,
             November 2000.

  [RFC3182]  Yadav, S., Yavatkar, R., Pabbati, R., Ford, P., Moore, T.,
             Herzog, S. and R. Hess, "Identity Representation for
             RSVP", RFC 3182, October 2001.

  [RFC2872]  Bernet, Y. and R. Pabbati, "Application and Sub
             Application Identity Policy Element for Use with RSVP",
             RFC 2872, June 2000.

  [DNDEF]    Wahl, M., Kille, S. and T. Howes, "Lightweight Directory
             Access Protocol (v3): UTF-8 String Representation of
             Distinguished Names", RFC 2253, December 1997.



























Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 71]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


13.  Authors' Addresses

  Yoram Ramberg
  Cisco Systems
  4 Maskit Street
  Herzliya Pituach, Israel  46766

  Phone:  +972-9-970-0081
  Fax:    +972-9-970-0219
  EMail:  [email protected]

  Yoram Snir
  Cisco Systems
  300 East Tasman Drive
  San Jose, CA 95134

  Phone:  +1 408-853-4053
  Fax:    +1 408 526-7864
  EMail:  [email protected]

  John Strassner
  Intelliden Corporation
  90 South Cascade Avenue
  Colorado Springs, Colorado  80903

  Phone:  +1-719-785-0648
  Fax:    +1-719-785-0644
  EMail: [email protected]

  Ron Cohen
  Ntear LLC

  Phone: +972-8-9402586
  Fax:   +972-9-9717798
  EMail: [email protected]

  Bob Moore
  IBM Corporation
  P. O. Box 12195, BRQA/501/G206
  3039 Cornwallis Rd.
  Research Triangle Park, NC 27709-2195

  Phone:   +1 919-254-4436
  Fax:     +1 919-254-6243
  EMail: [email protected]






Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 72]

RFC 3644              Policy QoS Information Model         November 2003


14.  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
  Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
  developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
  copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
  followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
  English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assignees.

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

Acknowledgement

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



















Snir, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 73]