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RFC1588 - White Pages Meeting Report

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group J. Postel

Request for Comments: 1588 C. Anderson

Category: Informational ISI

February 1994

WHITE PAGES MEETING REPORT

STATUS OF THIS MEMO

This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo

does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of

this memo is unlimited.

INTRODUCTION

This report describes the results of a meeting held at the November

IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) in Houston, TX, on November 2,

1993, to discuss the future of and approaches to a white pages

Directory services for the Internet.

As proposed to the National Science Foundation (NSF), USC/Information

Sciences Institute (ISI) conducted the meeting to discuss the

viability of the X.500 directory as a practical approach to providing

white pages service for the Internet in the near future and to

identify and discuss any alternatives.

An electronic mail mailing list was organized and discussions were

held via email for two weeks prior to the meeting.

1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

This report is organized around four questions:

1) What functions should a white pages directory perform?

There are two functions the white pages service must provide:

searching and retrieving.

Searching is the ability to find people given some fuzzy

information about them. Such as "Find the Postel in southern

California". Searches may often return a list of matches.

While the idea of indexing has been around for some time, such as

the IN-ADDR tree in the Domain Name System (DNS), a new

acknowledgment of its importance has emerged from these

discussions. Users want fast searching across the distributed

database on attributes different from the database structure.

Pre-computed indices satisfy this desire, though only for

specified searches.

Retrieval is oBTaining additional information associated with a

person, such as an address, telephone number, email mailbox, or

security certificate.

Security certificates (a type of information associated with an

individual) are essential for the use of end-to-end

authentication, integrity, and privacy in Internet applications.

The development of secure applications in the Internet is

dependent on a directory system for retrieving the security

certificate associated with an individual. For example, the

privacy enhanced electronic mail (PEM) system has been developed

and is ready to go into service, and is now hindered by the lack

of an easily used directory of security certificates. An open

question is whether or not such a directory needs to be internally

secure.

2) What approaches will provide us with a white pages directory?

It is evident that there are and will be several technologies in

use. In order to provide a white pages directory service that

accommodates multiple technologies, we should promote

interoperation and work toward a specification of the simplest

common communication form that is powerful enough to provide the

necessary functionality. This "common ground" approach aims to

provide the ubiquitous WPS (White Pages Service) with a high

functionality and a low entry cost.

3) What are the problems to be overcome?

It must be much easier to be part of the Internet white pages than

to bring up a X.500 DSA (Directory Service Agent), yet we must

make good use of the already deployed X.500 DSAs. Simpler white

pages services (such as Whois++) must be defined to promote

multiple implementations. To promote reliable operation, there

must be some central management of the X.500 system. A common

naming scheme must be identified and documented. A set of index-

servers, and indexing techniques, must be developed. The storage

and retrieval of security certificates must be provided.

4) What should the deployment strategy be?

Some central management must be provided, and easy to use user

interfaces (such as the Gopher "gateway"), must be widely

deployed. The selection of a naming scheme must be documented.

We should capitalize on the existing infrastructure of already

deployed X.500 DSAs. The "common ground" model should be adopted.

A specification of the simplest common communication form must be

developed. Information about how to set up a new server (of

whatever kind) in "cookbook" form should be made available.

RECOMMENDATIONS

1. Adopt the common ground approach. Encourage multiple client and

server types, and the standardization of an interoperation

protocol between them. The clients may be simple clients,

front-ends, "gateways", or embedded in other information Access

clients, such as Gopher or WWW (World Wide Web) client programs.

The interoperation protocol will define message types, message

sequences, and data fields. An element of this protocol should

be the use of Universal Record Locators (URLs).

2. Promote the development of index-servers. The index-servers

should use several different methods both for gathering data for

their indices, and for searching their indices.

3. Support a central management for the X.500 system. To get the

best advantage of the effort already invested in the X.500

directory system it is essential to provide the relatively small

amount of central management necessary to keep the system

functioning.

4. Support the development of security certificate storage and

retrieval from the white pages service. One practical approach

is initially to focus on getting support from the existing X.500

directory infrastructure. This effort should also include

design and development of the storage and retrieval of security

certificates for other white pages services, such as Whois++.

2. HISTORY

In February 1989, a meeting on Internet white pages service was

initiated by the FRICC (Federal Research Internet Coordinating

Committee) and the ensuing discussions resulted in RFC1107 [1] that

offered some technical conclusions. Widespread deployment was to

have taken place by mid-1992.

RFC1107: K. Sollins, "Plan for Internet Directory Services",

[1].

Several other RFCs have been written suggesting deployment strategies

and plans for an X.500 Directory Service.

They are:

RFC1275: S. Hardcastle-Kille, "Replication Requirements to

provide an Internet Directory using X.500", [2].

RFC1308: C. Weider, J. Reynolds, "Executive Introduction to

Directory Services Using the X.500 Protocol", [3].

RFC1309: C. Weider, J. Reynolds, S. Heker, "Technical Overview

of Directory Services Using the X.500 Protocol", [4].

RFC1430: S. Hardcastle-Kille, E. Huizer, V. Cerf, R. Hobby &

S. Kent, "A Strategic Plan for Deploying an Internet X.500

Directory Service", [5].

Also, a current working draft submitted by A. Jurg of SURFnet

entitled, "Introduction to White pages services based on X.500",

describes why we need a global white pages service and why X.500 is

the answer [6].

The North America Directory Forum (NADF) also has done some useful

work setting conventions for commercial providers of X.500 directory

service. Their series of memos is relevant to this discussion. (See

RFC1417 for an overview of this note series [7].) In particular,

NADF standing document 5 (SD-5) "An X.500 Naming Scheme for National

DIT Subtrees and its Application for c=CA and c=US" is of interest

for its model of naming based on civil naming authorities [8].

Deployment of a X.500 directory service including that under the PSI

(Performance Systems International) White Pages Pilot Project and the

PARADISE Project is significant, and continues to grow, albeit at a

slower rate than the Internet.

3. QUESTIONS

Four questions were posed to the discussion list:

1) What functions should a white pages directory perform?

2) What approaches will provide us with a white pages directory?

3) What are the problems to be overcome?

4) What should the deployment strategy be?

3.A. WHAT FUNCTIONS SHOULD A WHITE PAGES DIRECTORY PERFORM?

The basic function of a white pages service is to find people and

information about people.

In finding people, the service should work fast when searching for

people by name, even if the information regarding location or

organization is vague. In finding information about people, the

service should retrieve information associated with people, such as a

phone number, a postal or email address, or even a certificate for

security applications (authentication, integrity, and privacy).

Sometimes additional information associated with people is provided

by a directory service, such as a list of publications, a description

of current projects, or a current travel itinerary.

Back in 1989, RFC1107 detailed 8 requirements of a white pages

service: (1) functionality, (2) correctness of information, (3) size,

(4) usage and query rate, (5) response time, (6) partitioned

authority, (7) access control, (8) multiple transport protocol

support; and 4 additional features that would make it more useful:

(1) descriptive naming that could support a yellow pages service, (2)

accountability, (3) multiple interfaces, and (4) multiple clients.

Since the writing of RFC1107, many additional functions have been

identified. A White Pages Functionality List is attached as Appendix

1. The problem is harder now, the Internet is much bigger, and there

are many more options available (Whois++, Netfind, LDAP (Lightweight

Direct Access Protocol), different versions of X.500 implementations,

etc.)

A white pages directory should be flexible, should have low resource

requirements, and should fit into other systems that may be currently

in use; it should not cost a lot, so that future transitions are not

too costly; there should be the ability to migrate to something else,

if a better solution becomes available; there should be a way to

share local directory information with the Internet in a seamless

fashion and with little extra effort; the query responses should be

reliable enough and consistent enough that automated tools could be

used.

3.B. WHAT APPROACHES WILL PROVIDE US WITH A WHITE PAGES DIRECTORY?

People have different needs, tastes, etc. Consequently, a large part

of the ultimate solution will include bridging among these various

solutions. Already we see a Gopher to X.500 gateway, a Whois++ to

X.500 gateway, and the beginnings of a WWW to X.500 gateway. Gopher

can talk to CSO (a phonebook service developed by University of

Illinois), WAIS (Wide Area Information Server), etc. WWW can talk to

everything. Netfind knows about several other protocols.

Gopher and WAIS "achieved orbit" simply by providing means for people

to eXPort and to access useful information; neither system had to

provide ubiquitous service. For white pages, if the service doesn't

provide answers to specific user queries some reasonable proportion

of the time, users view it as as failure. One way to achieve a high

hit rate in an exponentially growing Internet is to use a proactive

data gathering architecture (e.g., as realized by archie and

Netfind). Important as they are, replication, authentication, etc.,

are irrelevant if no one uses the service.

There are pluses and minuses to a proactive data gathering method.

On the plus side, one can build a large database quickly. On the

minus side, one can get garbage in the database. One possibility is

to use a proactive approach to (a) acquire data for administrative

review before being added to the database, and/or (b) to check the

data for consistency with the real world. Additionally, there is

some question about the legality of proactive methods in some

countries.

One solution is to combine existing technology and infrastructure to

provide a good white pages service, based on a X.500 core plus a set

of additional index/references servers. DNS can be used to "refer"

to the appropriate zone in the X.500 name space, using WAIS or

Whois++, to build up indexes to the X.500 server which will be able

to process a given request. These can be index-servers or centroids

or something new.

Some X.500 purists might feel this approach muddles the connecting

fabric among X.500 servers, since the site index, DNS records, and

customization gateways are all outside of X.500. On the other hand,

making X.500 reachable from a common front-end would provide added

incentive for sites to install X.500 servers. Plus, it provides an

immediate (if interim) solution to the need for a global site index

in X.500. Since the goal is to have a good white pages service,

X.500 purity is not essential.

It may be that there are parts of the white pages problem that cannot

be addressed without "complex technology". A solution that allows

the user to progress up the ladder of complexity, according to taste,

perceived need, and available resources may be a much healthier

approach. However, experience to date with simpler solutions

(Whois++, Netfind, archie) indicates that a good percentage of the

problem of finding information can be addressed with simpler

approaches. Users know this and will resist attempts to make them

pay the full price for the full solution when it is not needed.

Whereas managers and funders may be concerned with the complexity of

the technology, users are generally more concerned with the quality

and ease of use of the service. A danger in supporting a mix of

technologies is that the service may become so variable that the

loose constraints of weak service in some places lead users to see

the whole system as too loose and weak.

Some organizations will not operate services that they cannot get for

free or they cannot try cheaply before investing time and money.

Some people prefer a bare-bones, no support solution that only gives

them 85 percent of what they want. Paying for the service would not

be a problem for many sites, once the value of the service has been

proven. Although there is no requirement to provide free software

for everybody, we do need viable funding and support mechanisms. A

solution can not be simply dictated with any expectation that it will

stick.

Finally, are there viable alternative technologies to X.500 now or do

we need to design something new? What kind of time frame are we

talking about for development and deployment? And will the new

technology be extensible enough to provide for the as yet unimagined

uses that will be required of directory services 5 years from now?

And will this directory service ultimately provide more capabilities

than just white pages?

3.C. WHAT ARE THE PROBLEMS TO BE OVERCOME?

There are two classes of problems to be examined; technology issues

and infrastructure.

TECHNOLOGY:

How do we populate the database and make software easily available?

Many people suggest that a public domain version of X.500 is

necessary before a wide spread X.500 service is operational. The

current public domain version is said to be difficult to install and

to bring into operation, but many organizations have successfully

installed it and have had their systems up and running for some time.

Note that the current public domain program, quipu, is not quite

standard X.500, and is more suited to research than production

service. Many people who tried earlier versions of quipu abandoned

X.500 due to its costly start up time, and inherent complexity.

The ISODE (ISO Development Environment) Consortium is currently

developing newer features and is addressing most of the major

problems. However, there is the perception that the companies in the

consortium have yet to turn these improvements into actual products,

though the consortium says the companies have commercial off-the-

shelf (COTS) products available now. The improved products are

certainly needed now, since if they are too late in being deployed,

other solutions will be implemented in lieu of X.500.

The remaining problem with an X.500 White Pages is having a high

quality public domain DSA. The ISODE Consortium will make its

version available for no charge to Universities (or any non-profit or

government organization whose primary purpose is research) but if

that leaves a sizeable group using the old quipu implementation, then

there is a significant problem. In such a case, an answer may be for

some funding to upgrade the public version of quipu.

In addition, the quipu DSA should be simplified so that it is easy to

use. Tim Howes' new disk-based quipu DSA solves many of the memory

problems in DSA resource utilization. If one fixes the DSA resource

utilization problem, makes it fairly easy to install, makes it freely

available, and publishes a popular press book about it, X.500 may

have a better chance of success.

The client side of X.500 needs more work. Many people would rather

not expend the extra effort to get X.500 up. X.500 takes a sharp

learning curve. There is a perception that the client side also

needs a complex Directory User Interface (DUI) built on ISODE. Yet

there are alternative DUIs, such as those based on LDAP. Another

ASPect of the client side is that access to the directory should be

built into other applications like gopher and email (especially,

accessing PEM X.509 certificates).

We also need data conversion tools to make the transition between

different systems possible. For example, NASA had more than one

system to convert.

Searching abilities for X.500 need to be improved. LDAP is great

help, but the following capabilities are still needed:

-- commercial grade easily maintainable servers with back-end

database support.

-- clients that can do exhaustive search and/or cache useful

information and use heuristics to narrow the search space in case

of ill-formed queries.

-- index servers that store index information on a "few" key

attributes that DUIs can consult in narrowing the search space.

How about index attributes at various levels in the tree that

capture the information in the corresponding subtree?

Work still needs to be done with Whois++ to see if it will scale to

the level of X.500.

An extended Netfind is attractive because it would work without any

additional infrastructure changes (naming, common schema, etc.), or

even the addition of any new protocols.

INFRASTRUCTURE:

The key issues are central management and naming rules.

X.500 is not run as a service in the U.S., and therefore those using

X.500 in the U.S. are not assured of the reliability of root servers.

X.500 cannot be taken seriously until there is some central

management and coordinated administration support in place. Someone

has to be responsible for maintaining the root; this effort is

comparable to maintaining the root of the DNS. PSI provided this

service until the end of the FOX project [9]; should they receive

funding to continue this? Should this be a commercial enterprise?

Or should this function be added to the duties of the InterNIC?

New sites need assistance in getting their servers up and linked to a

central server.

There are two dimensions along which to consider the infrastructure:

1) general purpose vs. specific, and 2) tight vs. loose information

framework.

General purpose leads to more complex protocols - the generality is

an overhead, but gives the potential to provide a framework for a

wide variety of services. Special purpose protocols are simpler, but

may lead to duplication or restricted scope.

Tight information framework costs effort to coerce existing data and

to build structures. Once in place, it gives better managability and

more uniform access. The tight information framework can be

subdivided further into: 1) the naming approach, and 2) the object

and attribute extensibility.

Examples of systems placed in this space are: a) X.500 is a general

purpose and tight information framework, b) DNS is a specific and

tight information framework, c) there are various research efforts in

the general purpose and loose information framework, and d) Whois++

employs a specific and loose information framework.

We need to look at which parts of this spectrum we need to provide

services. This may lead to concluding that several services are

desirable.

3.D. WHAT SHOULD THE DEPLOYMENT STRATEGY BE?

No solution will arise simply by providing technical specifications.

The solution must fit the way the Internet adopts information

technology. The information systems that have gained real momentum

in the Internet (WAIS, Gopher, etc.) followed the model:

-- A small group goes off and builds a piece of software that

supplies badly needed functionality at feasible effort to

providers and users.

-- The community rapidly adopts the system as a de facto standard.

-- Many people join the developers in improving the system and

standardizing the protocols.

What can this report do to help make this happen for Internet white

pages?

Deployment Issues.

-- A strict hierarchical layout is not suitable for all directory

applications and hence we should not force fit it.

-- A typical organization's hierarchical information itself is often

proprietary; they may not want to divulge it to the outside world.

It will always be true that Institutions (not just commercial)

will always have some information that they do not wish to display

to the public in any directory. This is especially true for

Institutions that want to protect themselves from headhunters, and

sales personnel.

-- There is the problem of multiple directory service providers, but

see NADF work on "Naming Links" and their "CAN/KAN" technology

[7].

A more general approach such as using a knowledge server (or a set

of servers) might be better. The knowledge servers would have to

know about which server to contact for a given query and thus may

refer to either service provider servers or directly to

institution-operated servers. The key problem is how to collect

the knowledge and keep it up to date. There are some questions

about the viability of "naming links" without a protocol

modification.

-- Guidelines are needed for methods of searching and using directory

information.

-- A registration authority is needed to register names at various

levels of the hierarchy to ensure uniqueness or adoption of the

civil naming structure as delineated by the NADF.

It is true that deployment of X.500 has not seen exponential growth

as have other popular services on the Internet. But rather than

abandoning X.500 now, these efforts, which are attempting to address

some of the causes, should continue to move forward. Certainly

installation complexity and performance problems with the quipu

implementation need solutions. These problems are being worked on.

One concern with the X.500 service has been the lack of ubiquitous

user agents. Very few hosts run the ISODE package. The use of LDAP

improves this situation. The X.500-gopher gateway has had the

greatest impact on providing wide-spread access to the X.500 service.

Since adding X.500 as a service on the ESnet Gopher, the use of the

ESnet DSA has risen dramatically.

Another serious problem affecting the deployment of X.500, at least

in the U.S., is the minimal support given to building and maintaining

the necessary infrastructure since the demise of the Fox Project [9].

Without funding for this effort, X.500 may not stand a chance in the

United States.

4. REVIEW OF TECHNOLOGIES

There are now many systems for finding information, some of these are

oriented to white pages, some include white pages, and others

currently ignore white pages. In any case, it makes sense to review

these systems to see how they might fit into the provision of an

Internet white pages service.

4.A. X.500

Several arguments in X.500's favor are its flexibility, distributed

architecture, security, superiority to paper directories, and that it

can be used by applications as well as by humans. X.500 is designed

to provide a uniform database facility with replication,

modification, and authorization. Because it is distributed, it is

particularly suited for a large global White Pages directory. In

principle, it has good searching capabilities, allowing searches at

any level or in any subtree of the DIT (Directory Information Tree).

There are DUIs available for all types of workstations and X.500 is

an international standard. In theory, X.500 can provide vastly

better directory service than other systems, however, in practice,

X.500 is difficult, too complicated, and inconvenient to use. It

should provide a better service. X.500 is a technology that may be

used to provide a white pages service, although some features of

X.500 may not be needed to provide just a white pages service.

The are three reasons X.500 deployment has been slow, and these are

largely the same reasons people don't like it:

1) The available X.500 implementations (mostly quipu based on the

ISODE) are very large and complicated software packages that are

hard to work with. This is partly because they solve the general

X.500 problem, rather than the subset needed to provide an

Internet white pages directory. In practice, this means that a

portion of the code/complexity is effectively unused.

The LDAP work has virtually eliminated this concern on the client

side of things, as LDAP is both simple and lightweight. Yet, the

complexity problem still exists on the server side of things, so

people continue to have trouble bringing up data for simple

clients to access.

It has been suggested that the complexity in X.500 is due to the

protocol stack and the ISODE base. If this is true, then LDAP may

be simple because it uses TCP directly without the ISODE base. A

version of X.500 server that took the same approach might also be

"simple" or at least simpler. Furthermore, the difficulty in

getting an X.500 server up may be related to finding the data to

put in the server, and so may be a general data management problem

rather than an X.500 specific problem.

There is some evidence that eventually a large percentage of the

use of directory services may be from applications rather than

direct user queries. For example, mail-user-agents exist that are

X.500 capable with an integrated DUA (Directory User Agent).

2) You have to "know a lot" to get a directory service up and running

with X.500. You have to know about object classes and attributes

to get your data into X.500. You have to get a distinguished name

for your organization and come up with an internal tree structure.

You have to contact someone before you can "come online" in the

pilot. It's not like gopher where you type "make", tell a few

friends, and you're up and running.

Note that a gopher server is not a white pages service, and as

noted elsewhere in this report, there are a number of issues that

apply to white pages service that are not addressed by gopher.

Some of these problems could be alleviated by putting in place

better procedures. It should not any be harder to get connected

to X.500 than it is to get connected to the DNS, for example.

However, there is a certain amount of complexity that may be

inherent in directory services. Just compare Whois++ and X.500.

X.500 has object classes. Whois++ has templates. X.500 has

attributes. Whois++ has fields. X.500 has distinguished names.

Whois++ has handles.

3) Getting data to populate the directory, converting it into the

proper form, and keeping it up-to-date turns out to be a hard

problem. Often this means talking to the administrative computing

department at your organization.

This problem exists regardless of the protocol used. It should be

easy to access this data through the protocol you're using, but

that says more about implementations than it does about the

protocol. Of course, if the only X.500 implementation you have

makes it really hard to do, and the Whois++ implementation you

have makes it easy, it's hard for that not to reflect on the

protocols.

The fact that there are sites like University of Michigan, University

of Minnesota, Rutgers University, NASA, LBL, etc. running X.500 in

serious production mode shows that the problem has more to do with

the current state of X.500 software procedures. It takes a lot of

effort to get it going. The level of effort required to keep it

going is relatively very small.

The yellow pages problem is not really a problem. If you look at it

in the traditional phonebook-style yellow pages way, then X.500 can

do the job just like the phone book does. Just organize the

directory based on different (i.e., non-geographical) criteria. If

you want to "search everything", then you need to prune the search

space. To do this you can use the Whois++ centroids idea, or

something similar. But this idea is as applicable to X.500 as it is

to Whois++. Maybe X.500 can use the centroids idea most effectively.

Additionally, it should be noted that there is not one single Yellow

Pages service, but that according to the type of query there could be

several such as querying by role, by location, by email address.

No one is failing to run X.500 because they perceive it fails to

solve the yellow pages problem. The reasons are more likely one or

more of the three above.

X.500's extra complexity is paying off for University of Michigan.

University of Michigan started with just people information in their

tree. Once that infrastructure was in place, it was easy for them to

add more things to handle mailing lists/email groups, yellow pages

applications like a documentation index, directory of images, etc.

The ESnet community is using X.500 right now to provide a White Pages

service; users succeed everyday in searching for information about

colleagues given only a name and an organizational affiliation; and

yes, they do load data into X.500 from an Oracle database.

LBL finds X.500 very useful. They can lookup DNS information, find

what Zone a Macintosh is in, lookup departmental information, view

the current weather satellite image, and lookup people information.

LDAP should remove many of the complaints about X.500. Implementing

a number of LDAP clients is very easy and has all the functionality

needed. Perhaps DAP should be scrapped.

Another approach is the interfacing of X.500 servers to WWW (the

interface is sometimes called XWI). Using the mosaic program from

the NCSA, one can access X.500 data.

INTERNET X.500

The ISO/ITU may not make progress on improving X.500 in the time

frame required for an Internet white pages service. One approach is

to have the Internet community (e.g., the IETF) take responsibility

for developing a subset or profile of that part of X.500 it will use,

and developing solutions for the ambiguous and undefined parts of

X.500 that are necessary to provide a complete service.

Tasks this approach might include are:

1. Internet (IETF) control of the base of the core service white

pages infrastructure and standard.

2. Base the standard on the 1993 specification, especially

replication and access control.

3. For early deployment choose which parts of the replication

protocol are really urgently needed. It may be possible to define

a subset and to make it mandatory for the Internet.

4. Define an easy and stable API (Application Program Interface) for

key access protocols (DAP, LDAP).

5. Use a standard knowledge model.

6. Make sure that high performance implementations will exist for the

most important servers, roles principally for the upper layers of

the DSA tree.

7. Make sure that servers will exist that will be able to efficiently

get the objects (or better the attributes) from existing

traditional databases for use at the leaves of the DSA tree.

4.B. WHOIS++

The very first discussions of this protocol started in July 1992. In

less than 15 months there were 3 working public domain

implementations, at least 3 more are on the way, and a Whois++

front-end to X.500. In addition, the developers who are working on

the resource location system infrastructure (URL/URI) have committed

to implementing it on top of Whois++ because of its superior search

capabilities.

Some of the main problems with getting a White Pages directory going

have been: (1) search, (2) lack of public domain versions, (3)

implementations are too large, (4) high start up cost, and (5) the

implementations don't make a lot of sense for a local directory,

particularly for small organizations. Whois++ can and does address

all these problems very nicely.

Search is built into Whois++, and there is a strong commitment from

the developers to keep this a high priority.

The protocols are simple enough that someone can write a server in 3

days. And people have done it. If the protocols stay simple, it

will always be easy for someone to whip out a new public domain

server. In this respect, Whois++ is much like WAIS or Gopher.

The typical Whois++ implementation is about 10 megabytes, including

the WAIS source code that provides the data engine. Even assuming a

rough doubling of the code as additional necessary functionality is

built in, that's still quite reasonable, and compares favorably with

the available implementations of X.500. In addition, WAIS is disk-

based from the start, and is optimized for local searching. Thus,

this requires only disk storage for the data and the indexes. In a

recent test, Chris Weider used a 5 megabyte source data file with the

Whois++ code. The indices came to about another 7 megabytes, and the

code was under 10 megabytes. The total is 22 megabytes for a Whois++

server.

The available Whois++ implementations take about 25 minutes to

compile on a Sun SPARCstation IPC. Indexing a 5 megabyte data file

takes about another 20 minutes on an IPC. Installation is very easy.

In addition, since the Whois++ server protocol is designed to be only

a front-end, organizations can keep their data in any form they want.

Whois++ makes sense as a local directory service. The

implementations are small, install quickly, and the raw query

language is very simple. The simplicity of the interaction between

the client and the server make it easy to experiment with and to

write clients for, something that wasn't true of X.500 until LDAP.

In addition, Whois++ can be run strictly as a local service, with

integration into the global infrastructure done at any time.

It is true that Whois++ is not yet a fully functional White Pages

service. It requires a lot of work before it will be so. However,

X.500 is not that much closer to the goal than Whois++ is.

Work needs to be done on replication and authentication of data. The

current Whois++ system does not lend itself to delegation. Research

is still needed to improve the system and see if it scales well.

4.C. NETFIND

Right now, the white pages service with the most coverage in the

Internet is Mike Schwartz' Netfind. Netfind works in two stages: 1)

find out where to ask, and 2) start aSKINg.

The first stage is based on a database of netnews articles, UUCP

maps, NIC WHOIS databases, and DNS traversals, which then maps

organizations and localities to domain names. The second stage

consists of finger queries, Whois queries, smtp expns and vrfys, and

DNS lookups.

The key feature of Netfind is that it is proactive. It doesn't

require that the system administrator bring up a new server, populate

it with all kinds of information, keep the information in sync, worry

about update, etc. It just works.

A suggestion was made that Netfind could be used as a way to populate

the X.500 directory. A tool might do a series of Netfind queries,

making the corresponding X.500 entries as it progresses.

Essentially, X.500 entries would be "discovered" as people look for

them using Netfind. Others do not believe this is feasible.

Another perhaps less interesting merger of Netfind and X.500 is to

have Netfind add X.500 as one of the places it looks to find

organizations (and people).

A search can lead you to where a person has an account (e.g.,

law.xxx.edu) only to find a problem with the DNS services for that

domain, or the finger service is unavailable, or the machines are not

be running Unix (there are lots of VMS machines and IBM mainframes

still out there). In addition, there are security gateways. The

trends in computing are towards the use of powerful portables and

mobile computing and hence Netfind's approach may not work. However,

Netfind proves to be an Excellent yellow-pages service for domain

information in DNS servers - given a set of keyWords it lists a set

of possible domain names.

Suppose we store a pointer in DNS to a white-pages server for a

domain. We can use Netfind to come up with a list of servers to

search, query these servers, then combine the responses. However, we

need a formal method of gathering white-pages data and informal

methods will not work and may even get into legal problems.

The user search phase of Netfind is a short-term solution to

providing an Internet white pages. For the longer term, the

applicability of the site discovery part of Netfind is more relevant,

and more work has been put into that part of the system over the past

2 years than into the user search phase.

Given Netfind's "installed customer base" (25k queries per day, users

in 4875 domains in 54 countries), one approach that might make sense

is to use Netfind as a migration path to a better directory, and

gradually phase Netfind's user search scheme out of existence. The

idea of putting a record in the DNS to point to the directory service

to search at a site is a good start.

One idea for further development is to have the DNS record point to a

"customization" server that a site can install to tailor the way

Netfind (or whatever replaces Netfind) searches their site. This

would provide sites a choice of degrees of effort and levels of

service. The least common denominator is what Netfind presently

does: DNS/SMTP/finger. A site could upgrade by installing a

customization server that points to the best hosts to finger, or that

says "we don't want Netfind to search here" (if people are

sufficiently concerned about the legal/privacy issues, the default

could be changed so that searches must be explicitly enabled). The

next step up is to use the customization server as a gateway to a

local Whois, CSO, X.500, or home grown white pages server. In the

long run, if X.500 (or Whois++, etc.) really catches on, it could

subsume the site indexing part of Netfind and use the above approach

as an evolution path to full X.500 deployment. However, other

approaches may be more productive. One key to Netfind's success has

been not relying on organizations to do anything to support Netfind,

however the customization server breaks this model.

Netfind is very useful. Users don't have to do anything to wherever

they store their people data to have it "included" in Netfind. But

just like archie, it would be more useful if there were a more common

structure to the information it gives you, and therefore to the

information contained in the databases it accesses. It's this common

structure that we should be encouraging people to move toward.

As a result of suggestions made at the November meeting, Netfind has

been extended to make use of URL information stored in DNS records.

Based on this mechanism, Netfind can now interoperate with X.500,

WHOIS, and PH, and can also allow sites to tune which hosts Netfind

uses for SMTP or Finger, or restrict Netfind from searching their

site entirely.

4.D. ARCHIE

Archie is a success because it is a directory of files that are

accessible over the network. Every FTP site makes a "conscious"

decision to make the files available for anonymous FTP over the

network. The mechanism that archie uses to gather the data is the

same as that used to transfer the files. Thus, the success rate is

near 100%. In a similar vein, if Internet sites make a "conscious"

decision to make white-pages data available over the network, it is

possible to link these servers to create a world-wide directory, such

as X.500, or build an index that helps to isolate the servers to be

searched, Whois++. Users don't have to do anything to their FTP

archives to have them included in archie. But everybody recognizes

that it could be more useful if only there were some more common

structure to the information, and to the information contained in the

archives. Archie came after the anonymous FTP sites were in wide-

spread use. Unfortunately for white-pages, we are building tools,

but there is no data.

4.E. FINGER

The Finger program that allows one to get either information about an

individual with an account, or a list of currently logged in users,

from a host running the server, can be used to check a suggestion

that a particular individual has an account on a particular host.

This does not provide an efficient method to search for an

individual.

4.F. GOPHER

A "gateway" between Gopher and X.500 has been created so that one can

examine X.500 data from a Gopher client. Similar "gateways" are

needed for other white pages systems.

4.G. WWW

One extension to WWW would be an attribute type for the WWW URI/URL

with the possibility for any client to request from the X.500 server

(1) either the locator (thus the client would decide to access or not

the actual data), or (2) for client not capable of accessing this

data, the data itself (packed) in the ASN.1 encoded result.

This would give access to potentially any piece of information

available on the network through X.500, and in the white pages case

to photos or voice messages for persons.

This solution is preferable to one consisting of storing this

multimedia information directly in the directory, because it allows

WWW capable DUIs to access directly any piece of data no matter how

large. This work on URIs is not WWW-specific.

5. ISSUES

5.A. DATA PROTECTION

Outside of the U.S., nearly all developed countries have rather

strict data protection acts (to ensure privacy mostly) that governs

any database on personal data.

It is mandatory for the people in charge of such white pages

databases to have full control over the information that can be

stored and retrieved in such a database, and to provide access

controls over the information that is made available.

If modification is allowed, then authentication is required. The

database manager must be able to prevent users from making available

unallowed information.

When we are dealing with personal records the issues are a little

more involved than exporting files. We can not allow trawling of

data and we need access-controls so that several applications can use

the directory and hence we need authentication.

X.500 might have developed faster if security issues were not part of

the implementation. There is tension between quick lightweight

implementations and the attempt to operate in a larger environment

with business issues incorporated. The initial belief was that data

is owned by the people who put the data into the system, however,

most data protection laws appoint the organizations holding the data

responsible for the quality of the data of their individuals.

Experience also shows that the people most affected by inaccurate

data are the people who are trying to access the data. These

problems apply to all technologies.

5.B. STANDARDS

Several types of standards are needed: (1) standards for

interoperation between different white pages systems (e.g., X.500 and

Whois++), (2) standards for naming conventions, and (3) and standards

within the structured data of each system (what fields or attributes

are required and optional, and what are their data types).

The standards for interoperation may be developed from the work now

in progress on URLs, with some additional protocol developed to

govern the types of messages and message sequences.

Both the naming of the systems and the naming of individuals would

benefit from consistent naming conventions. The use of the NADF

naming scheme should be considered.

When structured data is exchanged, standards are needed for the data

types and the structural organization. In X.500, much effort has

gone into the definition of various structures or schemas, and yet

few standard schemas have emerged.

There is a general consensus that a "cookbook" for Administrators

would make X.500 implementation easier and more attractive. These

are essential for getting X.500 in wider use. It is also essential

that other technologies such as Whois++, Netfind, and archie also

have complete user guides available.

5.C. SEARCHING AND RETRIEVING

The main complaint, especially from those who enjoyed using a

centralized database (such as the InterNIC Whois service), is the

need to search for all the John Doe's in the world. Given that the

directory needs to be distributed, there is no way of answering this

question without incurring additional cost.

This is a problem with any distributed directory - you just can't

search every leaf in the tree in any reasonable amount of time. You

need to provide some mechanism to limit the number of servers that

need to be contacted. The traditional way to handle this is with

hierarchy. This requires the searcher to have some idea of the

structure of the directory. It also comes up against one of the

standard problems with hierarchical databases - if you need to search

based on a characteristic that is NOT part of the hierarchy, you are

back to searching every node in the tree, or you can search an index

(see below).

In general:

-- the larger the directory the more need for a distributed solution

(for upkeep and managability).

-- once you are distributed, the search space for any given search

MUST be limited.

-- this makes it necessary to provide more information as part of the

query (and thus makes the directory harder to use).

Any directory system can be used in a manner that makes searching

less than easy. With a User Friendly Name (UFN) query, a user can

usually find an entry (presuming it exists) without a lot of trouble.

Using additional listings (as per NADF SD-5) helps to hide geographic

or civil naming infrastructure knowledge requirements.

Search power is a function of DSA design in X.500, not a function of

Distinguished Naming. Search can be aided by addition in X.500 of

non-distinguishing attributes, and by using the NADF Naming Scheme it

is possible to lodge an entry anywhere in the DIT that you believe is

where it will be looked for.

One approach to the distributed search problem is to create another

less distributed database to search, such as an index. This is done

by doing a (non-interactive) pre-search, and collecting the results

in an index. When a user wants to do a real time search, one first

searches the index to find pointers to the appropriate data records

in the distributed database. One example of this is the building of

centroids that contain index information. There may be a class of

servers that hold indices, called "index-servers".

5.D. INDEXING

The suggestion for how to do fast searching is to do indexing. That

is to pre-compute an index of people from across the distributed

database and hold that index in an index server. When a user wants

to search for someone, he first contacts the index-server. The

index-server searches its index data and returns a pointer (or a few

pointers) to specific databases that hold data on people that match

the search criteria. Other systems which do something comparable to

this are archie (for FTP file archives), WAIS, and Netfind.

5.E. COLLECTION AND MAINTENANCE

The information must be "live" - that is, it must be used. Often one

way to ensure this is to use the data (perhaps locally) for something

other than white pages. If it isn't, most people won't bother to

keep the information up to date. The white pages in the phone book

have the advantage that the local phone company is in contact with

the listee monthly (through the billing system), and if the address

is not up to date, bills don't get delivered, and there is feedback

that the address is wrong. There is even better contact for the

phone number, since the local phone company must know that for their

basic service to work properly. It is this aspect of directory

functionality that leads towards a distributed directory system for

the Internet.

One approach is to use existing databases to supply the white pages

data. It then would be helpful to define a particular use of SQL

(Structured Query Language) as a standard interface language between

the databases and the X.500 DSA or other white pages server. Then

one needs either to have the directory service access the existing

database using an interface language it already knows (e.g., SQL), or

to have tools that periodically update the directory database from

the existing database. Some sort of "standard" query format (and

protocol) for directory queries, with "standard" field names will be

needed to make this work in general. In a way, both X.500 and

Whois++ provide this. This approach implies customization at every

existing database to interface to the "standard" query format.

Some strongly believe that the white pages service needs to be

created from the bottom up with each organization supplying and

maintaining its own information, and that such information has to be

the same -- or a portion of the same -- information the organization

uses locally. Otherwise the global information will be stale and

incomplete.

One way to make this work is to distribute software that:

- is useful locally,

- fits into the global scheme,

- is available free, and

- works on most Unix systems.

With respect to privacy, it would be good for the local software to

have controls that make it possible to put company sensitive

information into the locally maintained directory and have only a

portion of it exported for outsiders.

5.F. NAMING STRUCTURE

We need a clear naming scheme capable of associating a name with

attributes, without any possible ambiguities, that is stable over

time, but also capable of coping with changes. This scheme should

have a clear idea of naming authorities and be able to store

information required by authentication mechanisms (e.g., PEM or X.509

certificates).

The NADF is working to establish a National Public Directory Service,

based on the use of existing Civil Naming Authorities to register

entry owners' names, and to deal with the shared-entry problem with a

shared public DIT supported by competing commercial service

providers. At this point, we do not have any sense at the moment as

to how [un]successful the NADF may be in accomplishing this.

The NADF eventually concluded that the directory should be organized

so entries can be found where people (or other entities) will look

for them, not where civil naming authorities would place their

archival name registration records.

There are some incompatibilities between use of the NADF Naming

Scheme, the White Pages Pilot Naming Scheme, and the PARADISE Naming

Scheme. This should be resolved.

5.G. CLAYMAN PROPOSAL

RFC1107 offered a "strawman" proposal for an Internet Directory

Service. The next step after strawman is sometimes called "clayman",

and here a clayman proposal is presented.

We assume only white pages service is to be provided, and we let

sites run whatever access technologies they want to (with whatever

access controls they feel comfortable).

Then the architecture can be that the discovery process leads to a

set of URLs. A URL is like an address, but it is a typed address

with identifiers, access method, not a protocol. The client sorts

the URLs and may discard some that it cannot deal with. The client

talks to "meaningful URLs" (such as Whois, Finger, X.500).

This approach results in low entry cost for the servers that want to

make information available, a Darwinian selection of access

technologies, coalescence in the Internet marketplace, and a white

pages service will tend toward homogeneity and ubiquity.

Some issues for further study are what discovery technology to use

(Netfind together with Whois++ including centroids?), how to handle

non-standard URLs (one possible solution is to put server on top of

these (non-standard URLs) which reevaluates the pointer and acts as a

front-end to a database), which data model to use (Finger or X.500),

and how to utilize a common discovery technology (e.g., centroids) in

a multiprotocol communication architecture.

The rationale for this meta-WPS approach is that it builds on current

practices, while striving to provide a ubiquitous directory service.

Since there are various efforts going on to develop WPS based on

various different protocols, one can envisage a future with a meta-

WPS that uses a combination of an intelligent user agent and a

distributed indexing service to access the requested data from any

available WPS. The user perceived functionality of such a meta-WPS

will necessarily be restricted to the lowest common denominator. One

will hope that through "market" forces, the number of protocols used

will decrease (or converge), and that the functionality will

increase.

The degree to which proactive data gathering is permitted may be

limited by national laws. It may be appropriate to gather data about

which hosts have databases, but not about the data in those

databases.

6. CONCLUSIONS

We now revisit the questions we set out to answer and briefly

describe the key conclusions.

6.A. WHAT FUNCTIONS SHOULD A WHITE PAGES DIRECTORY PERFORM?

After all the discussion we come to the conclusion that there are two

functions the white pages service must provide: searching and

retrieving.

Searching is the ability to find people given some fuzzy information

about them. Such as "Find the Postel in southern California".

Searches may often return a list of matches.

The recognition of the importance of indexing in searching is a major

conclusion of these discussions. It is clear that users want fast

searching across the distributed database on attributes different

from the database structure. It is possible that pre-computed

indices can satisfy this desire.

Retrieval is obtaining additional information associated with a

person, such as address, telephone number, email mailbox, and

security certificate.

This last, security certificates, is a type of information associated

with an individual that is essential for the use of end-to-end

authentication, integrity, and privacy, in Internet applications.

The development of secure application in the Internet is dependent on

a directory system for retrieving the security certificate associated

with an individual. The PEM system has been developed and is ready

to go into service, but is now held back by the lack of an easily

used directory of security certificates.

PEM security certificates are part of the X.509 standard. If X.500

is going to be set aside, then other alternatives need to be

explored. If X.500 distinguished naming is scrapped, some other

structure will need to come into existence to replace it.

6.B. WHAT APPROACHES WILL PROVIDE US WITH A WHITE PAGES DIRECTORY?

It is clear that there will be several technologies in use. The

approach must be to promote the interoperation of the multiple

technologies. This is traditionally done by having conventions or

standards for the interfaces and communication forms between the

different systems. The need is for a specification of the simplest

common communication form that is powerful enough to provide the

necessary functionality. This allows a variety of user interfaces on

any number of client systems communicating with different types of

servers. The IETF working group (WG) method of developing standards

seems well suited to this problem.

This "common ground" approach aims to provide the ubiquitous WPS with

a high functionality and a low entry cost. This may done by singling

out issues that are common for various competing WPS and coordinate

work on these in specific and dedicated IETF WGs (e.g., data model

coordination). The IETF will continue development of X.500 and

Whois++ as two separate entities. The work on these two protocols

will be broken down in various small and focussed WGs that address

specific technical issues, using ideas from both X.500 and Whois++.

The goal being to produce common standards for information formats,

data model and access protocols. Where possible the results of such

a WG will be used in both Whois++ and X.500, although it is envisaged

that several WGs may work on issues that remain specific to one of

the protocols. The IDS (Integrated Directory Services) WG continues

to work on non-protocol specific issues. To achieve coordination

that leads to convergence rather than divergence, the applications

area directorate will provide guidance to the Application Area

Directors as well as to the various WGs, and the User Services Area

Council (USAC) will provide the necessary user perspective.

6.C. WHAT ARE THE PROBLEMS TO BE OVERCOME?

There are several problems that can be solved to make progress

towards a white pages service more rapid. We need:

To make it much easier to be part of the Internet white pages than

bringing up a X.500 DSA, yet making good use of the already deployed

X.500 DSAs.

To define new simpler white pages services (such as Whois++) such

that numerous people can create implementations.

To provide some central management of the X.500 system to promote

good operation.

To select a naming scheme.

To develop a set of index-servers, and indexing techniques, to

provide for fast searching.

To provide for the storage and retrieval of security certificates.

6.D. WHAT SHOULD THE DEPLOYMENT STRATEGY BE?

We should capitalize on the existing infrastructure of already

deployed X.500 DSAs. This means that some central management must be

provided, and easy to use user interfaces (such as the Gopher

"gateway"), must be widely deployed.

-- Document the selection of a naming scheme (e.g., the NADF scheme).

-- Adopt the "common ground" model. Encourage the development of

several different services, with a goal of interworking between

them.

-- Develop a specification of the simplest common communication form

that is powerful enough to provide the necessary functionality.

The IETF working group method of developing standards seems well

suited to this problem.

-- Make available information about how to set up new servers (of

what ever kind) in "cookbook" form.

7. SUMMARY

While many issues have been raised, there are just a few where we

recommend the action be taken to support specific elements of the

overall white pages system.

RECOMMENDATIONS

1. Adopt the common ground approach - give all protocols equal

access to all data. That is, encourage multiple client and

server types, and the standardization of an interoperation

protocol between them. The clients may be simple clients,

front-ends, "gateways", or embedded in other information access

clients, such as Gopher or WWW client programs. The

interoperation protocol will define some message types, message

sequences, and data fields. An element of this protocol should

be the use of URLs.

2. Promote the development of index-servers. The index-servers

should use several different methods of gathering data for their

indices, and several different methods for searching their

indices.

3. Support a central management for the X.500 system. To get the

best advantage of the effort already invested in the X.500

directory system it is essential to provide the relatively small

amount of central management necessary to keep the system

functioning.

4. Support the development of security certificate storage and

retrieval from the white pages service. The most practical

approach is to initially focus on getting this supported by the

existing X.500 directory infrastructure. It should also include

design and development of the storage and retrieval of security

certificates in other white pages services, such as Whois++.

8. REFERENCES

[1] Sollins, K., "Plan for Internet Directory Services", RFC1107,

M.I.T. Laboratory for Computer Science, July 1989.

[2] Hardcastle-Kille, S., "Replication Requirements to provide an

Internet Directory using X.500, RFC1275, University College

London, November 1991.

[3] Weider, C., and J. Reynolds, "Executive Introduction to

Directory Services Using the X.500 Protocol", FYI 13, RFC1308,

ANS, USC/Information Sciences Institute, March 1992.

[4] Weider, C., Reynolds, J., and S. Heker, "Technical Overview of

Directory Services Using the X.500 Protocol", FYI 14, RFC1309,

ANS, USC/Information Sciences Institute,, JvNC, March 1992.

[5] Hardcastle-Kille, S., Huizer, E., Cerf, V., Hobby, R., and S.

Kent, "A Strategic Plan for Deploying an Internet X.500

Directory Service", RFC1430, ISODE Consortium, SURFnet bv,

Corporation for National Research Initiatives, University of

California, Davis, Bolt, Beranek, and Newman, February 1993.

[6] Jurg, A., "Introduction to White pages services based on X.500",

Work in Progress, October 1993.

[7] The North American Directory Forum, "NADF Standing Documents: A

Brief Overview", RFC1417, The North American Directory Forum",

NADF, February 1993.

[8] NADF, An X.500 Naming Scheme for National DIT Subtrees and its

Application for c=CA and c=US", Standing Document 5 (SD-5).

[9] Garcia-Luna, J., Knopper, M., Lang, R., Schoffstall, M.,

Schraeder, W., Weider, C., Yeong, W, Anderson, C., (ed.), and J.

Postel (ed.), "Research in Directory Services: Fielding

Operational X.500 (FOX)", Fox Project Final Report, January

1992.

9. GLOSSARY

API - Application Program Interface

COTS - commercial off the shelf

CSO - a phonebook service developed by University of Illinois

DAP - Direct Access Protocol

DIT - Directory Information Tree

DNS - Domain Name System

DUI - Directory User Interface

DUA - Directory User Agent

DSA - Directory Service Agent

FOX - Fielding Operational X.500 project

FRICC - Federal Research Internet Coordinating Committee

IETF - Internet Engineering Task Force

ISODE - ISO Development Environment

LDAP - Lightweight Direct Access Protocol

NADF - North American Directory Forum

PEM - Privacy Enhanced Mail

PSI - Performance Systems International

SQL - Structured Query Language

QUIPU - an X.500 DSA which is a component of the ISODE package

UFN - User Friendly Name

URI - Uniform Resource Identifier

URL - Uniform Resource Locator

WAIS - Wide Area Information Server

WPS - White Pages Service

WWW - World Wide Web

9. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This report is assembled from the words of the following participants

in the email discussion and the meeting. The authors are responsible

for selecting and combining the material. Credit for all the good

ideas goes to the participants. Any bad ideas are the responsibility

of the authors.

Allan Cargille University of Wisconsin

Steve Crocker TIS

Peter Deutsch BUNYIP

Peter Ford LANL

Jim Galvin TIS

Joan Gargano UC Davis

Arlene Getchell ES.NET

Rick Huber INTERNIC - AT&T

Christian Huitema INRIA

Erik Huizer SURFNET

Tim Howes University of Michigan

Steve Kent BBN

Steve Kille ISODE Consortium

Mark Kosters INTERNIC - Network Solutions

Paul Mockapetris ARPA

Paul-Andre Pays INRIA

Dave Piscitello BELLCORE

Marshall Rose Dover Beach Consulting

Sri Sataluri INTERNIC - AT&T

Mike Schwartz University of Colorado

David Staudt NSF

Einar Stefferud NMA

Chris Weider MERIT

Scott Williamson INTERNIC - Network Solutions

Russ Wright LBL

Peter Yee NASA

10. SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS

While there are comments in this memo about privacy and security,

there is no serious analysis of security considerations for a white

pages or directory service in this memo.

11. AUTHORS' ADDRESSES

Jon Postel

USC/Information Sciences Institute

4676 Admiralty Way

Marina del Rey, CA 90292

Phone: 310-822-1511

Fax: 310-823-6714

EMail: Postel@ISI.EDU

Celeste Anderson

USC/Information Sciences Institute

4676 Admiralty Way

Marina del Rey, CA 90292

Phone: 310-822-1511

Fax: 310-823-6714

EMail: Celeste@ISI.EDU

APPENDIX 1

The following White Pages Functionality List was developed by Chris

Weider and amended by participants in the current discussion of an

Internet white pages service.

Functionality list for a White Pages / Directory services

Serving information on People only

1.1 Protocol Requirements

a) Distributability

b) Security

c) Searchability and easy navigation

d) Reliability (in particular, replication)

e) Ability to serve the information desired (in particular,

multi-media information)

f) Obvious benefits to encourage installation

g) Protocol support for maintenance of data and 'knowledge'

h) Ability to support machine use of the data

i) Must be based on Open Standards and respond rapidly to correct

deficiencies

j) Serve new types of information (not initially planned) only

only upon request

k) Allow different operation modes

1.2 Implementation Requirements

a) Searchability and easy navigation

b) An obvious and fairly painless upgrade path for organizations

c) Obvious benefits to encourage installation

d) Ubiquitous clients

e) Clients that can do exhaustive search and/or cache useful

information and use heuristics to narrow the search space in

case of ill-formed queries

f) Ability to support machine use of the data

g) Stable APIs

1.3 Sociological Requirements

a) Shallow learning curve for novice users (both client and

server)

b) Public domain servers and clients to encourage experimentation

c) Easy techniques for maintaining data, to encourage users to

keep their data up-to-date

d) (particularly for organizations) The ability to hide an

organization's internal structure while making the data public.

e) Widely recognized authorities to guarantee unique naming during

registrations (This is specifically X.500 centric)

f) The ability to support the privacy / legal requirements of all

participants while still being able to achieve good coverage.

g) Supportable infrastructure (Perhaps an identification of what

infrastructure support requires and how that will be

maintained)

Although the original focus of this discussion was on White Pages,

many participants believe that a Yellow Pages service should be built

into a White Pages scheme.

Functionality List for Yellow Pages service

Yellow pages services, with data primarily on people

2.1 Protocol Requirements

a) all listed in 1.1

b) Very good searching, perhaps with semantic support OR

b2) Protocol support for easy selection of proper keywords to

allow searching

c) Ways to easily update and maintain the information required by

the Yellow Pages services

d) Ability to set up specific servers for specific applications or

a family of applications while still working with the WP

information bases

2.2 Implementation Requirements

a) All listed in 1.2

b) Server or client support for relevance feedback

2.3 Sociological Requirements

a) all listed in 1.3

Advanced directory services for resource location (not just people

data)

3.1 Protocol Requirements

a) All listed in 2.1

b) Ability to track very rapidly changing data

c) Extremely good and rapid search techniques

3.2 Implementation Requirements

a) All listed in 2.2

b) Ability to integrate well with retrieval systems

c) Speed, Speed, Speed

3.3 Sociological Requirements

a) All listed in 1.3

b) Protocol support for 'explain' functions: 'Why didn't this

query work?'

 
 
 
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