Network Working Group                                           B. Aboba
Request for Comments: 4282                                     Microsoft
Obsoletes: 2486                                               M. Beadles
Category: Standards Track                                       ENDFORCE
                                                               J. Arkko
                                                               Ericsson
                                                              P. Eronen
                                                                  Nokia
                                                          December 2005


                    The Network Access Identifier

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 (2005).

Abstract

  In order to provide roaming services, it is necessary to have a
  standardized method for identifying users.  This document defines the
  syntax for the Network Access Identifier (NAI), the user identity
  submitted by the client during network authentication.  "Roaming" may
  be loosely defined as the ability to use any one of multiple Internet
  Service Providers (ISPs), while maintaining a formal, customer-vendor
  relationship with only one.  Examples of where roaming capabilities
  might be required include ISP "confederations" and ISP-provided
  corporate network access support.  This document is a revised version
  of RFC 2486, which originally defined NAIs.  Enhancements include
  international character set and privacy support, as well as a number
  of corrections to the original RFC.












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Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
     1.1. Terminology ................................................3
     1.2. Requirements Language ......................................4
     1.3. Purpose ....................................................4
  2. NAI Definition ..................................................4
     2.1. Formal Syntax ..............................................4
     2.2. NAI Length Considerations ..................................6
     2.3. Support for Username Privacy ...............................6
     2.4. International Character Sets ...............................7
     2.5. Compatibility with E-Mail Usernames ........................8
     2.6. Compatibility with DNS .....................................8
     2.7. Realm Construction .........................................8
     2.8. Examples ..................................................10
  3. Security Considerations ........................................10
  4. IANA Considerations ............................................11
  5. References .....................................................11
     5.1. Normative References ......................................11
     5.2. Informative References ....................................12
  Appendix A.  Changes from RFC 2486 ................................14
  Appendix B.  Acknowledgements .....................................14

1.  Introduction

  Considerable interest exists for a set of features that fit within
  the general category of "roaming capability" for network access,
  including dialup Internet users, Virtual Private Network (VPN) usage,
  wireless LAN authentication, and other applications.  Interested
  parties have included the following:

  o  Regional Internet Service Providers (ISPs) operating within a
     particular state or province, looking to combine their efforts
     with those of other regional providers to offer dialup service
     over a wider area.

  o  National ISPs wishing to combine their operations with those of
     one or more ISPs in another nation to offer more comprehensive
     dialup service in a group of countries or on a continent.

  o  Wireless LAN hotspots providing service to one or more ISPs.

  o  Businesses desiring to offer their employees a comprehensive
     package of dialup services on a global basis.  Those services may
     include Internet access as well as secure access to corporate
     intranets via a VPN, enabled by tunneling protocols such as the





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     Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) [RFC2637], the Layer 2
     Forwarding (L2F) protocol [RFC2341], the Layer 2 Tunneling
     Protocol (L2TP) [RFC2661], and the IPsec tunnel mode [RFC2401].

  In order to enhance the interoperability of roaming services, it is
  necessary to have a standardized method for identifying users.  This
  document defines syntax for the Network Access Identifier (NAI).
  Examples of implementations that use the NAI, and descriptions of its
  semantics, can be found in [RFC2194].

  This document is a revised version of RFC 2486 [RFC2486], which
  originally defined NAIs.  Differences and enhancements compared to
  RFC 2486 are listed in Appendix A.

1.1.  Terminology

  This document frequently uses the following terms:

  Network Access Identifier

     The Network Access Identifier (NAI) is the user identity submitted
     by the client during network access authentication.  In roaming,
     the purpose of the NAI is to identify the user as well as to
     assist in the routing of the authentication request.  Please note
     that the NAI may not necessarily be the same as the user's e-mail
     address or the user identity submitted in an application layer
     authentication.

  Network Access Server

     The Network Access Server (NAS) is the device that clients connect
     to in order to get access to the network.  In PPTP terminology,
     this is referred to as the PPTP Access Concentrator (PAC), and in
     L2TP terminology, it is referred to as the L2TP Access
     Concentrator (LAC).  In IEEE 802.11, it is referred to as an
     Access Point.

  Roaming Capability

     Roaming capability can be loosely defined as the ability to use
     any one of multiple Internet Service Providers (ISPs), while
     maintaining a formal, customer-vendor relationship with only one.
     Examples of cases where roaming capability might be required
     include ISP "confederations" and ISP-provided corporate network
     access support.






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  Tunneling Service

     A tunneling service is any network service enabled by tunneling
     protocols such as PPTP, L2F, L2TP, and IPsec tunnel mode.  One
     example of a tunneling service is secure access to corporate
     intranets via a Virtual Private Network (VPN).

1.2.  Requirements Language

  In this document, the key words "MAY", "MUST, "MUST NOT", "OPTIONAL",
  "RECOMMENDED", "SHOULD", and "SHOULD NOT", are to be interpreted as
  described in [RFC2119].

1.3.  Purpose

  As described in [RFC2194], there are a number of providers offering
  network access services, and the number of Internet Service Providers
  involved in roaming consortia is increasing rapidly.

  In order to be able to offer roaming capability, one of the
  requirements is to be able to identify the user's home authentication
  server.  For use in roaming, this function is accomplished via the
  Network Access Identifier (NAI) submitted by the user to the NAS in
  the initial network authentication.  It is also expected that NASes
  will use the NAI as part of the process of opening a new tunnel, in
  order to determine the tunnel endpoint.

2.  NAI Definition

2.1.  Formal Syntax

  The grammar for the NAI is given below, described in Augmented
  Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) as documented in [RFC4234].  The grammar for
  the username is based on [RFC0821], and the grammar for the realm is
  an updated version of [RFC1035].

  nai         =  username
  nai         =/ "@" realm
  nai         =/ username "@" realm

  username    =  dot-string
  dot-string  =  string
  dot-string  =/ dot-string "." string
  string      =  char
  string      =/ string char
  char        =  c
  char        =/ "\" x




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  c           =  %x21    ; '!'              allowed
                         ; '"'              not allowed
  c           =/ %x23    ; '#'              allowed
  c           =/ %x24    ; '$'              allowed
  c           =/ %x25    ; '%'              allowed
  c           =/ %x26    ; '&'              allowed
  c           =/ %x27    ; '''              allowed
                         ; '(', ')'         not allowed
  c           =/ %x2A    ; '*'              allowed
  c           =/ %x2B    ; '+'              allowed
                         ; ','              not allowed
  c           =/ %x2D    ; '-'              allowed
                         ; '.'              not allowed
  c           =/ %x2F    ; '/'              allowed
  c           =/ %x30-39 ; '0'-'9'          allowed
                         ; ';', ':', '<'    not allowed
  c           =/ %x3D    ; '='              allowed
                         ; '>'              not allowed
  c           =/ %x3F    ; '?'              allowed
                         ; '@'              not allowed
  c           =/ %x41-5a ; 'A'-'Z'          allowed
                         ; '[', '\', ']'    not allowed
  c           =/ %x5E    ; '^'              allowed
  c           =/ %x5F    ; '_'              allowed
  c           =/ %x60    ; '`'              allowed
  c           =/ %x61-7A ; 'a'-'z'          allowed
  c           =/ %x7B    ; '{'              allowed
  c           =/ %x7C    ; '|'              allowed
  c           =/ %x7D    ; '}'              allowed
  c           =/ %x7E    ; '~'              allowed
                         ; DEL              not allowed
  c           =/ %x80-FF ; UTF-8-Octet      allowed (not in RFC 2486)
                         ; Where UTF-8-octet is any octet in the
                         ; multi-octet UTF-8 representation of a
                         ; unicode codepoint above %x7F.
                         ; Note that c must also satisfy rules in
                         ; Section 2.4, including, for instance,
                         ; checking that no prohibited output is
                         ; used (see also Section 2.3 of
                         ; [RFC4013]).
  x           =  %x00-FF ; all 128 ASCII characters, no exception;
                         ; as well as all UTF-8-octets as defined
                         ; above (this was not allowed in
                         ; RFC 2486).  Note that x must nevertheless
                         ; again satisfy the Section 2.4 rules.

  realm       =  1*( label "." ) label
  label       =  let-dig *(ldh-str)



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  ldh-str     =  *( alpha / digit / "-" ) let-dig
  let-dig     =  alpha / digit
  alpha       =  %x41-5A  ; 'A'-'Z'
  alpha       =/ %x61-7A  ; 'a'-'z'
  digit       =  %x30-39  ; '0'-'9'

2.2.  NAI Length Considerations

  Devices handling NAIs MUST support an NAI length of at least 72
  octets.  Support for an NAI length of 253 octets is RECOMMENDED.
  However, the following implementation issues should be considered:

  o  NAIs are often transported in the User-Name attribute of the
     Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS) protocol.
     Unfortunately, RFC 2865 [RFC2865], Section 5.1, states that "the
     ability to handle at least 63 octets is recommended."  As a
     result, it may not be possible to transfer NAIs beyond 63 octets
     through all devices.  In addition, since only a single User-Name
     attribute may be included in a RADIUS message and the maximum
     attribute length is 253 octets; RADIUS is unable to support NAI
     lengths beyond 253 octets.

  o  NAIs can also be transported in the User-Name attribute of
     Diameter [RFC3588], which supports content lengths up to 2^24 - 9
     octets.  As a result, NAIs processed only by Diameter nodes can be
     very long.  Unfortunately, an NAI transported over Diameter may
     eventually be translated to RADIUS, in which case the above
     limitations apply.

2.3.  Support for Username Privacy

  Interpretation of the username part of the NAI depends on the realm
  in question.  Therefore, the "username" part SHOULD be treated as
  opaque data when processed by nodes that are not a part of the
  authoritative domain (in the sense of Section 4) for that realm.

  In some situations, NAIs are used together with a separate
  authentication method that can transfer the username part in a more
  secure manner to increase privacy.  In this case, NAIs MAY be
  provided in an abbreviated form by omitting the username part.
  Omitting the username part is RECOMMENDED over using a fixed username
  part, such as "anonymous", since it provides an unambiguous way to
  determine whether the username is intended to uniquely identify a
  single user.

  For roaming purposes, it is typically necessary to locate the
  appropriate backend authentication server for the given NAI before
  the authentication conversation can proceed.  As a result, the realm



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  portion is typically required in order for the authentication
  exchange to be routed to the appropriate server.

2.4.  International Character Sets

  This specification allows both international usernames and realms.
  International usernames are based on the use of Unicode characters,
  encoded as UTF-8 and processed with a certain algorithm to ensure a
  canonical representation.  Internationalization of the realm portion
  of the NAI is based on "Internationalizing Domain Names in
  Applications (IDNA)" [RFC3490].

  In order to ensure a canonical representation, characters of the
  username portion in an NAI MUST fulfill the ABNF in this
  specification as well as the requirements specified in [RFC4013].
  These requirements consist of the following:

  o  Mapping requirements, as specified in Section 2.1 of [RFC4013].
     Mapping consists of mapping certain characters to others (such as
     SPACE) in order to increase the likelihood of correctly performed
     comparisons.

  o  Normalization requirements, as specified in Section 2.2 of
     [RFC4013], are also designed to assist in comparisons.

  o  Prohibited output.  Certain characters are not permitted in
     correctly formed strings that follow Section 2.3 of [RFC4013].
     Ensuring that NAIs conform to their ABNF is not sufficient; it is
     also necessary to ensure that they do not contain prohibited
     output.

  o  Bidirectional characters are handled as specified in Section 2.4
     of [RFC4013].

  o  Unassigned code points are specified in Section 2.5 of [RFC4013].
     The use of unassigned code points is prohibited.

  The mapping, normalization, and bidirectional character processing
  MUST be performed by end systems that take international text as
  input.  In a network access setting, such systems are typically the
  client and the Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting (AAA)
  server.  NAIs are sent over the wire in their canonical form, and
  tasks such as normalization do not typically need to be performed by
  nodes that just pass NAIs around or receive them from the network.
  End systems MUST also perform checking for prohibited output and
  unassigned code points.  Other systems MAY perform such checks, when
  they know that a particular data item is an NAI.




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  The realm name is an "IDN-unaware domain name slot" as defined in
  [RFC3490].  That is, it can contain only ASCII characters.  An
  implementation MAY support Internationalized Domain Names (IDNs)
  using the ToASCII operation; see [RFC3490] for more information.

  The responsibility for the conversion of internationalized domain
  names to ASCII is left for the end systems, such as network access
  clients and AAA servers.  Similarly, we expect domain name
  comparisons, matching, resolution, and AAA routing to be performed on
  the ASCII versions of the internationalized domain names.  This
  provides a canonical representation, ensures that intermediate
  systems such as AAA proxies do not need to perform translations, and
  can be expected to work through systems that are unaware of
  international character sets.

2.5.  Compatibility with E-Mail Usernames

  As proposed in this document, the Network Access Identifier is of the
  form user@realm.  Please note that while the user portion of the NAI
  is based on the BNF described in [RFC0821], it has been extended for
  internationalization support as well as for purposes of Section 2.7,
  and is not necessarily compatible with the usernames used in e-mail.
  Note also that the internationalization requirements for NAIs and
  e-mail addresses are different, since the former need to be typed in
  only by the user himself and his own operator, not by others.

2.6.  Compatibility with DNS

  The BNF of the realm portion allows the realm to begin with a digit,
  which is not permitted by the BNF described in [RFC1035].  This
  change was made to reflect current practice; although not permitted
  by the BNF described in [RFC1035], Fully Qualified Domain Names
  (FQDNs) such as 3com.com are commonly used and accepted by current
  software.

2.7.  Realm Construction

  NAIs are used, among other purposes, for routing AAA transactions to
  the user's home realm.  Usually, the home realm appears in the realm
  portion of the NAI, but in some cases a different realm can be used.
  This may be useful, for instance, when the home realm is reachable
  only via another mediating realm.

  Such usage may prevent interoperability unless the parties involved
  have a mutual agreement that the usage is allowed.  In particular,
  NAIs MUST NOT use a different realm than the home realm unless the
  sender has explicit knowledge that (a) the specified other realm is
  available and (b) the other realm supports such usage.  The sender



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  may determine the fulfillment of these conditions through a database,
  dynamic discovery, or other means not specified here.  Note that the
  first condition is affected by roaming, as the availability of the
  other realm may depend on the user's location or the desired
  application.

  The use of the home realm MUST be the default unless otherwise
  configured.

  Where these conditions are fulfilled, an NAI such as

      [email protected]

  MAY be represented as in

      [email protected]

  In this case, the part before the (non-escaped) '!'  MUST be a realm
  name as defined in the ABNF in Section 2.1.  This realm name is an
  "IDN-unaware domain name slot", just like the realm name after the
  "@" character; see Section 2.4 for details.  When receiving such an
  NAI, the other realm MUST convert the format back to
  "[email protected]" when passing the NAI forward, as well as
  applying appropriate AAA routing for the transaction.

  The conversion process may apply also recursively.  That is, after
  the conversion, the result may still have one or more '!' characters
  in the username.  For instance, the NAI

      [email protected]

  would first be converted in other1.example.net to

      [email protected]

  and then at other2.example.net finally to

      [email protected]

  Note that the syntax described in this section is optional and is not
  a part of the ABNF.  The '!' character may appear in the username
  portion of an NAI for other purposes as well, and in those cases, the
  rules outlined here do not apply; the interpretation of the username
  is up to an agreement between the identified user and the realm given
  after the '@' character.






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2.8.  Examples

  Examples of valid Network Access Identifiers include the following:

          bob
          [email protected]
          [email protected]
          [email protected]
          [email protected]
          [email protected]
          [email protected]
          fred=?#$&*+-/^[email protected]
          [email protected]
          [email protected]
          eng%[email protected]
          @privatecorp.example.net
          \(user\)@example.net
          [email protected]

  The last example uses an IDN converted into an ASCII representation.

  Examples of invalid Network Access Identifiers include the following:

          fred@example
          fred@example_9.com
          [email protected]@example.net
          [email protected]
          eng:[email protected]
          eng;[email protected]
          (user)@example.net
          <nancy>@example.net

3.  Security Considerations

  Since an NAI reveals the home affiliation of a user, it may assist an
  attacker in further probing the username space.  Typically, this
  problem is of most concern in protocols that transmit the username in
  clear-text across the Internet, such as in RADIUS, described in
  [RFC2865] and [RFC2866].  In order to prevent snooping of the
  username, protocols may use confidentiality services provided by
  protocols transporting them, such as RADIUS protected by IPsec
  [RFC3579] or Diameter protected by TLS [RFC3588].

  This specification adds the possibility of hiding the username part
  in the NAI, by omitting it.  As discussed in Section 2.3, this is
  possible only when NAIs are used together with a separate
  authentication method that can transfer the username in a secure
  manner.  In some cases, application-specific privacy mechanism have



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  also been used with NAIs.  For instance, some Extensible
  Authentication Protocol (EAP) methods apply method-specific
  pseudonyms in the username part of the NAI [RFC3748].  While neither
  of these approaches can protect the realm part, their advantage over
  transport protection is that privacy of the username is protected,
  even through intermediate nodes such as NASes.

4.  IANA Considerations

  In order to avoid creating any new administrative procedures,
  administration of the NAI realm namespace piggybacks on the
  administration of the DNS namespace.

  NAI realm names are required to be unique, and the rights to use a
  given NAI realm for roaming purposes are obtained coincident with
  acquiring the rights to use a particular Fully Qualified Domain Name
  (FQDN).  Those wishing to use an NAI realm name should first acquire
  the rights to use the corresponding FQDN.  Using an NAI realm without
  ownership of the corresponding FQDN creates the possibility of
  conflict and therefore is to be discouraged.

  Note that the use of an FQDN as the realm name does not require use
  of the DNS for location of the authentication server.  While Diameter
  [RFC3588] supports the use of DNS for location of authentication
  servers, existing RADIUS implementations typically use proxy
  configuration files in order to locate authentication servers within
  a domain and perform authentication routing.  The implementations
  described in [RFC2194] did not use DNS for location of the
  authentication server within a domain.  Similarly, existing
  implementations have not found a need for dynamic routing protocols
  or propagation of global routing information.  Note also that there
  is no requirement that the NAI represent a valid email address.

5.  References

5.1.  Normative References

  [RFC1035]        Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and
                   specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, November 1987.

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

  [RFC4234]        Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for
                   Syntax Specifications: ABNF", RFC 4234, October
                   2005.





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  [RFC3490]        Faltstrom, P., Hoffman, P., and A. Costello,
                   "Internationalizing Domain Names in Applications
                   (IDNA)", RFC 3490, March 2003.

  [RFC4013]        Zeilenga, K., "SASLprep: Stringprep Profile for User
                   Names and Passwords", RFC 4013, February 2005.

5.2.  Informative References

  [RFC0821]        Postel, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", STD 10,
                   RFC 821, August 1982.

  [RFC2194]        Aboba, B., Lu, J., Alsop, J., Ding, J., and W. Wang,
                   "Review of Roaming Implementations", RFC 2194,
                   September 1997.

  [RFC2341]        Valencia, A., Littlewood, M., and T. Kolar, "Cisco
                   Layer Two Forwarding (Protocol) "L2F"", RFC 2341,
                   May 1998.

  [RFC2401]        Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for
                   the Internet Protocol", RFC 2401, November 1998.

  [RFC2486]        Aboba, B. and M. Beadles, "The Network Access
                   Identifier", RFC 2486, January 1999.

  [RFC2637]        Hamzeh, K., Pall, G., Verthein, W., Taarud, J.,
                   Little, W., and G. Zorn, "Point-to-Point Tunneling
                   Protocol", RFC 2637, July 1999.

  [RFC2661]        Townsley, W., Valencia, A., Rubens, A., Pall, G.,
                   Zorn, G., and B. Palter, "Layer Two Tunneling
                   Protocol "L2TP"", RFC 2661, August 1999.

  [RFC2865]        Rigney, C., Willens, S., Rubens, A., and W. Simpson,
                   "Remote Authentication Dial In User Service
                   (RADIUS)", RFC 2865, June 2000.

  [RFC2866]        Rigney, C., "RADIUS Accounting", RFC 2866, June
                   2000.

  [RFC3579]        Aboba, B. and P. Calhoun, "RADIUS (Remote
                   Authentication Dial In User Service) Support For
                   Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)", RFC 3579,
                   September 2003.






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  [RFC3588]        Calhoun, P., Loughney, J., Guttman, E., Zorn, G.,
                   and J. Arkko, "Diameter Base Protocol", RFC 3588,
                   September 2003.

  [RFC3748]        Aboba, B., Blunk, L., Vollbrecht, J., Carlson, J.,
                   and H. Levkowetz, "Extensible Authentication
                   Protocol (EAP)", RFC 3748, June 2004.

  [netsel-problem] Arkko, J. and B. Aboba, "Network Discovery and
                   Selection Problem", Work in Progress, October 2005.









































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Appendix A.  Changes from RFC 2486

  This document contains the following updates with respect to the
  original NAI definition in RFC 2486 [RFC2486]:

  o  International character set support has been added for both
     usernames and realms.  Note that this implies character codes 128
     - 255 may be used in the username portion, which may be
     unacceptable to nodes that only support RFC 2486.  Many devices
     already allow this behaviour, however.

  o  Username privacy support has been added.  Note that NAIs without a
     username (for privacy) may not be acceptable to RFC 2486-compliant
     nodes.  Many devices already allow this behaviour, however.

  o  A recommendation to support NAI length of at least 253 octets has
     been added, and compatibility considerations among NAI lengths in
     this specification and various AAA protocols are discussed.  Note
     that long NAIs may not be acceptable to RFC 2486-compliant nodes.

  o  The mediating network syntax and its implications have been fully
     described and not given only as an example.  Note that this syntax
     is not intended to be a full solution to network discovery and
     selection needs as defined in [netsel-problem].  Rather, it is
     intended as a clarification of RFC 2486.

     However, as discussed in Section 2.7, this specification requires
     that this syntax be applied only when there is explicit knowledge
     that the peer system supports such syntax.

  o  The realm BNF entry definition has been changed to avoid an error
     (infinite recursion) in the original specification.

  o  Several clarifications and improvements have been incorporated
     into the ABNF specification for NAIs.

Appendix B.  Acknowledgements

  Thanks to Glen Zorn for many useful discussions of this problem
  space, and to Farid Adrangi for suggesting the representation of
  mediating networks in NAIs.  Jonathan Rosenberg reported the BNF
  error.  Dale Worley suggested clarifications of the x and special BNF
  entries.  Arne Norefors reported the length differences between RFC
  2486 and RFC 2865.  Paul Hoffman helped with the international
  character set issues.  Kalle Tammela, Stefaan De Cnodder, Nagi
  Jonnala, Bert Wijnen, Blair Bullock, Yoshihiro Ohba, Ignacio Goyret,
  John Loughney, Henrik Levkowetz, Ted Hardie, Bill Fenner, Sam
  Hartman, and Richard Perlman provided many useful comments on this



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RFC 4282             The Network Access Identifier         December 2005


  document.  The ABNF validator at http://www.apps.ietf.org/abnf.html
  was used to verify the syntactic correctness of the ABNF in
  Section 2.1.

Authors' Addresses

  Bernard Aboba
  Microsoft
  One Microsoft Way
  Redmond, WA  98052
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]


  Mark A. Beadles
  ENDFORCE
  565 Metro Place South Suite 300
  Dublin  OH 43017
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]


  Jari Arkko
  Ericsson
  Jorvas  02420
  Finland

  EMail: [email protected]


  Pasi Eronen
  Nokia Research Center
  P.O. Box 407
  FIN-00045 Nokia Group
  Finland

  EMail: [email protected]












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RFC 4282             The Network Access Identifier         December 2005


Full Copyright Statement

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