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RFC1218 - Naming scheme for c=US

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group The North American Directory Forum

Request for Comments: 1218 April 1991

A Naming Scheme for c=US

Status of this Memo

This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does

not specify an Internet standard. Distribution of this memo is

unlimited.

Summary

This RFCis a near-verbatim copy of a document, known as NADF-123,

which has been prodUCed by the North American Directory Forum (NADF).

The NADF is a collection of organizations which offer, or plan to

offer, public Directory services in North America, based on the CCITT

X.500 Recommendations. As a part of its charter, the NADF must reach

agreement as to how entries are named in the public portions of the

North American Directory. NADF-123 is a scheme proposed for this

purpose. The NADF is circulating NADF-123 widely, eXPressly for the

purpose of gathering comments. The next meeting of the NADF is in

mid-July, and it is important for comments to be received prior to

the meeting, so that the scheme may receive adequate review.

A Naming Scheme for c=US

The North American Directory Forum

NADF-123

Supercedes: NADF-103, NADF-71

March 21, 1991

ABSTRACT

This is one of a series of documents produced for discussion within

the North American Directory Forum. Distribution, with attribution,

is unlimited. This document is being circulated for comment. The

deadline for comments is July 1, 1991. Comments should be directed

to the contact given on page 16.

1. Introduction

Computer networks form the infrastructure between the users they

interconnect. For example, the electronic mail service offered by

computer networks provides a means for users to collaborate towards

some common goal. In the simplest cases, this collaboration may be

solely for the dissemination of information. In other cases, two

users may work on a joint research project, using electronic mail as

their primary means of communication.

However, networks themselves are built on an underlying naming and

numbering infrastructure, usually in the form of names and addresses.

For example, some authority must exist to assign network addresses to

ensure that numbering collisions do not occur. This is of paramount

importance for an environment which consists of multiple service

providers.

2. Approach

It should be observed that there are several different naming

universes that can be realized in the Directory Information Tree

(DIT). For example, geographical naming, community naming, political

naming, organizational naming, and so on. The choice of naming

universe largely determines the difficulty in mapping a user's query

into a series of Directory operations. Although it is possible to

simultaneously support multiple naming universes with the DIT, this

is likely to be unnatural. As such, this proposal focuses on a

single naming universe.

The naming universe in this proposal is based on civil authority.

That is, it uses the existing civil naming infrastructure and

suggests a (nearly) straight-forward mapping on the DIT. There are

four components to the naming architecture:

(1) civil naming and optimized civil naming, which reflects

names assigned by civil authority;

(2) organizational naming, which reflects names assigned

within organizations;

(3) ADDMD naming, which reflects names assigned to public

providers within the Directory service; and,

(4) application naming, which reflects names assigned to OSI

entities.

An important characteristic is that entries should be listed wherever

searches for them are likely to occur. This implies that a single

object may be listed under several entries.

2.1. Names and User-Friendliness

It must be emphasized that there are three distinct concepts which

are often confused when discussing a naming scheme:

(1) user-friendly naming: a property of a Directory which

allows users to easily identity objects;

(2) user-friendly name: a technique for naming an object

which exhibits "friendliness" according to an arbitrary

set of user-criteria; and,

(3) Distinguished Name: the administratively assigned name

for an entry in the OSI Directory.

It must be emphasized that Distinguished Names are not necessarily

user-friendly names, and further, that user-friendly naming in the

Directory is a property of the Directory Service, not of

Distinguished Names.

2.2. Choice of RDN Names

The key ASPect to appreciate for choice of RDNs is that they should

provide a large name space to avoid collisions: the naming strategy

must provide enough "real estate" to accommodate a large demand for

entries. This is the primary requirement for RDNs. A secondary

requirement is that RDNs should be meaningful (friendly to people)

and should not impede searching.

However, it is important to understand that this second requirement

can be achieved by using additional (non-distinguished) attribute

values. For example, if the RDN of an entry is

organizationName is Performance Systems International

then it is perfectly acceptable (and indeed desirable) to have other

values for the organizationName attribute, e.g.,

organizationName is PSI

The use of these abbreviated names greatly aids searching whilst

avoiding unnecessary Distinguished Name conflicts.

In order to appreciate the naming scheme which follows, it is

important to understand that it leverages, wherever possible,

existing naming infrastructure. That is, it relies heavily on non-

OSI naming authorities which already exist. Note that inasmuch as it

relies on existing naming authorities, there is little chance that

any "final" national decision could obsolete it. [Footnote: Any

naming scheme may be subject to the jurisdiction of certain national

agencies. For example, the US State Department is concerned with any

impact on US telecommunications treaty obligations.] (To do so would

require a national decision that disregards existing national and

regional infrastructure, and establishes some entirely new and

different national naming infrastructure.)

3. Civil Naming

Civil naming occurs at three levels:

(1) the national level, which contains objects that are

recognized throughout a country;

(2) the regional level, which contains objects that are

recognized throughout a state or state-equivalent; and,

(3) the local level, which contains objects that are

recognized within a populated place.

3.1. Naming at the National Level

At the national-level (at least) three kinds of names may be listed:

(1) The States and State-Equivalents

(2) Organizations with National Standing

(3) ADDMD Operators

3.1.1. The States and State-Equivalents

For each state or state-equivalent (the District of Columbia and the

eight outlying areas [Footnote: i.e., American Samoa, Federated

States of Micronesia, Guam, Marshall Islands, Northern Mariana

Islands, Palau, Puerto Rico, and Virgin Islands of the US.]), an

instance of an

usStateOrEquivalent

object is used. The RDN is formed as

localityName is <FIPS 5 name>

e.g.,

localityName is California

provides the RDN for the State of California. In addition, this

entry would contain attributes identifying both the FIPS 5 alpha and

numeric code for the State, e.g.,

fipsStateNumericCode is 06

fipsStateAlphaCode is CA

Of course, this entry could contain many other attributes such as

stateOrProvinceName is State of California

3.1.2. Organizations with National Standing

There is no authority in the United States which unambiguously

registers the alphanumeric names of organizations with national

standing. It is proposed that ANSI provide this registry and that

the ANSI alphanumeric name form be used as the basis for RDNs.

For each organization with national standing, an instance of an

usOrganization

object is used. The RDN is formed as

organizationName is <ANSI alphanumeric name form>

e.g.,

organizationName is Performance Systems International

In addition, this entry would contain attributes identifying the ANSI

Alphanumeric name form, e.g.,

ansiOrgNumericCode is 177777

Of course, this entry would contain many other attributes such as

organizationName is PSI

For the National Government, an instance of an

organization

object is also used, and the RDN is taken from the ANSI alphanumeric

name form registry.

3.1.3. ADDMD Operators

There is no authority in the United States which unambiguously

registers the names of ADDMD operators. It is expected that the

North American Directory Forum will coordinate with the US CCITT

National Committee Study Group D to provide this registry. (At

worst, the ADDMDs can use ANSI alphanumeric name forms for their RDN

attribute values.)

For each ADDMD operator, an instance of a

nadfADDMD

object is used. The RDN is formed as

addmdName is <NADF registered name>

e.g.,

addmdName is PSINet

3.2. Naming within a State or State-Equivalent

At the regional level (at least) two kinds of names may be listed:

(1) Populated Places

(2) Organizations with Regional Standing

3.2.1. Populated Places

For each populated place within a state or state-equivalent,

an instance of an

usPlace

object is used. The RDN is formed as

localityName is <FIPS 55 name>

e.g.,

localityName is Hartford

provides the RDN for the Hartford entry immediately subordinate to

the usStateOrEquivalent entry for the State of Connecticut. In

addition, this entry would contain attributes identifying the FIPS 55

place code, e.g.,

usPlaceCode is 37000

3.2.2. Organizations with Regional Standing

An organization is said to have regional standing if it is registered

with the "Secretary of State" or similar entity within that region,

as an entity doing business in the region.

For each organization with regional standing, an instance of an

organization

object is used. The RDN is formed as

organizationName is <registered name of organization>

e.g.,

organizationName is Network Management Associates

might provide the RDN for a business entity registered with the State

of California. In this case, the entry thus named would be

immediately subordinate to the usStateOrEquivalent entry for the

State of California.

Note that other non-distinguished attributes, such as an ANSI numeric

name form value, may be included in such an entry --- the

organization object might actually be a usOrganization object.

For the Regional Government, an instance of an

organization

object is also used. The RDN is formed as:

organizationName is Government

3.3. Naming within a Populated Place

At the local level (at least) three kinds of names may be listed:

(1) Persons

(2) Organizations with Local Standing

(3) MHS Distribution Lists

3.3.1. Naming of Persons

Within a populated place, there is no centralized naming entity which

registers residential persons. It is proposed that entries for

persons be immediately subordinate to the usPlace object which most

accurately reflects their place of residence.

For each person (wishing to have an entry in the Directory), an

instance of a residentialperson

residentialPerson

object is used. The RDN is usually multi-valued, formed with

commonName is <person's full name>

and some other attribute, such as postalCode, streetAddress, etc.

However, because streetAddress is often considered private

information, based on agreement with the entity managing the DMD and

the listed person, some other, distinguishing attribute may be used,

including a "serial number" (having no other purpose). It should be

noted however that this is non-helpful in regards to searching,

unless other attribute values containing meaningful information are

added to the entry and made available for public Access.

3.3.2. Organizations with Local Standing

An organization is said to have local standing if it is registered

with the County or City Clerk or similar entity within that locality

as an entity "doing business" in that place.

For each organization with local standing, an instance of an

organization

object is used. The RDN is formed as

organizationName is <registered name of organization>

e.g.,

organizationName is The Tied House

might provide the RDN for a business entity registered with the City

of Mountain View. In this case, the entry thus named would be

immediately subordinate to the usPlace entry for the City of Mountain

View.

Note that other non-distinguished attributes, such as an ANSI numeric

name form value, may be included in an entry. (That is, the

organization object might actually be a usOrganization object.)

For the Local Government, if any, an instance of an

organization

object is also used. The RDN is formed as:

organizationName is Government

3.4. Naming of MHS Distribution Lists

Naming of MHS distribution lists remains with the scoping DMD.

4. Optimized Civil Naming

The structure of the civil component of the architecture can be

concisely described as:

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Level Element objectClass Superior RDN

----------------------------------------------------------------------

root 0

----------------------------------------------------------------------

intl. 1 country 0 countryName

----------------------------------------------------------------------

natl. 2 usStateOrEquivalent 1 localityName

3 usOganization 1 organizationName

4 nadfADDMD 1 addmdName

----------------------------------------------------------------------

reg. 5 usPlace 2 localityName

6 organization 2 organizationName

----------------------------------------------------------------------

local 7 residentialPerson 5 commonName,

other

8 organization 5 organizationName

9 mhsDistributionList 5 commonName

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Consider how an interrogation algorithm might locate a residential

person, given:

(1) a string denoting the person's real-world name;

(2) a string denoting the real-world name of the populated

place in which the person lives; and,

(3) the Distinguished Name of the state or state-equivalent.

A straight-forward approach is to initiate a single-level search to

locate the desired populated place. The search results in zero or

more Distinguished Names being returned which correspond to the

string provided by the user. Then, for each populated place, a

suBTree search might be initiated to locate the desired residential

person. If the number of populated places returned by the first

search is large, then this strategy is inefficient.

A better approach would be to initiate a single search, with a filter

combining the strings for both the person's real-world name and the

place's real-world name. Unfortunately, such a search would have to

involve the whole-subtree anchored at the Distinguished Name for the

state or state-equivalent, which would be inefficient.

As such, it may be desirable to optimize the civil naming component

by listing some entries at a higher level. This is accomplished by

using a multi-valued RDN formed by combining the RDNs of the entry

and its superior.

There are three cases in civil naming:

(1) listing an organization with regional standing at the

national level;

(2) listing an organization with local standing at the

regional level; and,

(3) listing a person with local standing at the regional

level.

Hence, under the optimized civil naming component, a single-level

search, anchored at the Distinguished Name for the state or state-

equivalent, could be used. Further, the implementation of a DSA

supporting this optimization would highly-index the attributes used

for searching, in order to achieve high-performance.

In order to clearly indicate that optimized civil naming is in

effect, a new attribute type, nadfSearchGuide, is introduced. An

attribute value of this type is placed in an entry to indicate which

optimizations are in effect. Using the residential example above,

the entry for the state or state-equivalent would contain an

nadfSearchGuide value indicating that when searching for entries of

type residentialPerson, a single-level search should be performed

with a filter containing the logical-and of two terms, one involving

the commonName attribute, and the other involving the localityName

attribute. The nadfSearchGuide is a refinement of the X.500

searchGuide in that it indicates the depth of the search which should

be performed, and always contains an indication of the object class

for which the optimization exists.

Finally, note that for naming within organizations, this technique

might also be used.

4.1. Naming at the National Level

4.1.1. Organizations with Regional Standing

An organization with standing within a state or state-equivalent may

be listed directly under c=US.

For an organization with regional standing, an instance of an

organization

object is used. The RDN is multi-valued, formed as

organizationName is <registered name of organization>

localityName is <FIPS 5 name>

e.g.,

organizationName is Network Management Associates

localityName is California

It must be emphasized that uniqueness within the RDN comes from using

the a regional localityName (state or state-Equivalent) in

association with the correspondent organizationName in that region.

4.2. Naming within a State or State-Equivalent

4.2.1. Organizations with Local Standing

An organization with standing within a populated place may be listed

directly under its state or state-equivalent.

For an organization with local standing, an instance of an

organization

object is used. The RDN is multi-valued, formed as

organizationName is <registered name of organization>

localityName is <FIPS 55 name>

e.g.,

organizationName is The Tied House

localityName is City of Mountain View

It must be emphasized that uniqueness within the RDN comes from using

the a local localityName (populated place) in association with the

correspondent organizationName in that place.

4.2.2. Persons

An person may be listed directly under its state or state-equivalent.

For such a person, an instance of a

residentialPerson

object is used. The RDN is multi-valued, formed by taking the RDN of

the person and adding the RDN of the populated place containing the

person.

commonName is the Marshall T. Rose

postalCode is 94043-2112

localityName is City of Mountain View

Note that for optimization to occur, the RDN of the person must not

contain a localityName attribute value.

5. Organizational Naming

The internal structure of each usOrganization or organization object

is a matter for that organization to establish.

It is strongly recommended that organizationalUnit objects be used

for structuring. (If an organization uses a locality-based

organizational hierarchy, this information can still be represented

using the

organizationalUnit

object.)

6. ADDMD Naming

The internal structure of each nadfADDMD object is a matter for that

service-provider to establish.

7. Application Naming

There are (at least) four kinds of OSI entities which may be listed:

(1) Application Processes and Entities

(2) MHS Distribution Lists

(3) EDI Users

(4) Devices

7.1. Naming of Application Processes and Entities

Naming of OSI application processes and entities remains with the

scoping DMD. However, in order to foster interoperability, two

requirements are made: first, application entity objects must be

immediately subordinate to application process objects; and, second,

application entities are represented by the nadfApplicationEntity

object, which is identical to the applicationEntity object except

that the presence of an attribute value of

supportedApplicationContext is mandatory.

7.2. Naming of MHS Distribution Lists

Naming of MHS distribution lists remains with the scoping DMD.

7.3. Naming of EDI Users

Naming of EDI users remains with the scoping DMD.

7.4. Naming of Devices

Naming of OSI devices remains with the scoping DMD.

8. Usage Examples

Consider the following examples, expressed in a concise format (read

left-to-right):

Federal Government:

{ c=US, o=Government }

The State of California:

{ c=US, l=California }

The District of Columbia:

{ c=US, l=District of Columbia }

An organization with national standing:

{ c=US, o=Performance Systems International }

An ADDMD:

{ c=US, addmdName=PSINet }

The Government of the State of California:

{ c=US, l=California, o=Government }

The Government of the District of Columbia:

{ c=US, l=District of Columbia, o=Government }

A city within the State of California:

{ c=US, l=California, l=City of Mountain View }

An organization licensed to operate within the State of

California:

{ c=US,

l=California,

o=Network Management Associates, Inc. }

An optimized listing for a organization with regional

standing:

{ c=US,

{ l=California,

o=Network Management Associates }}

A city government:

{ c=US,

l=California,

l=City of Mountain View,

o=Government }

A residential person:

{ c=US,

l=California,

l=City of Mountain View,

{ cn=Marshall T. Rose, postalCode=94043-2112 }}

An organization licensed to operate within a city:

{ c=US,

l=California,

l=City of Mountain View,

o=The Tied House }

An entity within the Federal Government:

{ c=US, o=Government, ou=Department of the Air Force }

An entity within an organization with national standing:

{ c=US,

o=Performance Systems International,

ou=Marketing }

9. Acknowledgements

This document is based on many sources, including, but not limited

to:

- Listing Services Database Generic Requirements, Bellcore

TA-TSY-000985;

- Common Directory Use ED 013 (Q/511) (EWOS/EGDIR/90/156);

and,

- The THORN X.500 Naming Architecture (UCL-45 revision 6.1).

10. Bibliography

X.500: The Directory --- Overview of Concepts, Models, and

Service, CCITT Recommendation X.500, December, 1988.

US FIPS 5: Codes for the Identification of the States, The

District of Columbia and Outlying Areas of the United

States, and Associated Areas, US Department of Commerce

FIPS 5--2, May 28, 1987.

US FIPS 6: Counties and Equivalent Entities of the United

States, its Possessions, and Associated Areas, US

Department of Commerce FIPS 6--4, August 31, 1990.

US FIPS 55: Guideline: Codes for Named Populated Places,

Primary County Divisions, and other Locational Entities

of the United States and Outlying Areas, US Department of

Commerce FIPS 55--2, February 3, 1987.

The NADF is soliticting comments on this naming scheme. Comments

should be directed to:

Postal: Dr. Marshall T. Rose

Performance Systems International

5201 Great American Parkway

Suite 3106

Santa Clara, CA 95054

US

Telephone: +1 408 562 6222

Fax: +1 408 562 6223

Internet: mrose@psi.com

X.500: rose, psi, us

Comments should be received prior to July 1, 1991.

Appendix A: Naming Architecture

There are two aspects to the naming architecture: a DIT structure and

a set of related Schema definitions. These are shown on pages 17 and

18, respectively.

DIT Structure

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Level Element objectClass Superior RDN

----------------------------------------------------------------------

root 0

----------------------------------------------------------------------

intl. 1 country 0 countryName

----------------------------------------------------------------------

natl. 2 usStateOrEquivalent 1 localityName

3 usOganization 1 organizationName

4 nadfADDMD 1 addmdName

----------------------------------------------------------------------

reg. 5 usPlace 2 localityName

6 organization 2 organizationName

----------------------------------------------------------------------

local 7 residentialPerson 5 commonName,

other

8 organization 5 organizationName

9 mhsDistributionList 5 commonName

----------------------------------------------------------------------

----------------------------------------------------------------------

opt. 6* organization 1 organizationName,

localityName

7* residentialPerson 2 commonName,

other,

localityName

8* organization 2 organizationName,

localityName

----------------------------------------------------------------------

----------------------------------------------------------------------

org. 10** organizationalUnit 3,6,8,10,11 orgUnitName

11** locality 3,6,8,10,11 localityName

12** organizationalRole 3,6,8,10,11 commonName

13** organizationalPerson 3,6,8,10,11 commonName

----------------------------------------------------------------------

----------------------------------------------------------------------

appl. 14 applicationProcess 3,6,8,10,11 commonName

15 nadfApplicationEntity 14 commonName

16 mhsDistributionList 3,6,8,10,11 commonName

17 ediUser 3,6,8,10,11 ediName

18 device 3,6,8,10,11 commonName

----------------------------------------------------------------------

* = These are the optimized form of the corresponding element in the

civil component.

** = This scheme makes no requirements on the DIT structure within an

organization. The organizational structure shown here is only for

exposition. For example, MHS objects are not listed beneath the

organizational level, though they are likely to occur within an

organization.

Schema Definitions

NADF-SCHEMA { joint-iso-ccitt mhs(6) group(6) al-grimstad(5)

nadf(1) schema(1) }

DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN

IMPORTS

OBJECT-CLASS, ATTRIBUTE

FROM InformationFramework

{ joint-iso-ccitt ds(5) module(1)

informationFramework(1) }

caseIgnoreStringSyntax, Criteria

FROM SelectedAttributeTypes

{ joint-iso-ccitt ds(5) module(1)

selectedAttributeTypes(5) }

locality, organization, applicationEntity, top

FROM SelectedObjectClasses

{ joint-iso-ccitt ds(5) module(1)

selectedObjectClasses(6) }

;

nadf OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { joint-iso-ccitt mhs(6) group (6)

al-grimstad(5) 1 }

nadfModule OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { nadf 1 }

nadfAttributeType OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { nadf 4 }

nadfObjectClass OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { nadf 6 }

-- object classes

usStateOrEquivalent OBJECT-CLASS

-- localityName is used for RDN

-- values come from US FIPS PUB 5

SUBCLASS OF locality

MUST CONTAIN { fipsStateNumericCode,

fipsStateAlphaCode,

stateOrProvinceName }

MAY CONTAIN { nadfSearchGuide }

::= { nadfObjectClass 1 }

usPlace OBJECT-CLASS

-- localityName is used for RDN

-- values come from US FIPS PUB 55

SUBCLASS OF locality

MUST CONTAIN { fipsPlaceNumericCode,

localityName }

MAY CONTAIN { nadfSearchGuide }

::= { nadfObjectClass 2 }

usCounty OBJECT-CLASS

SUBCLASS OF usPlace

MUST CONTAIN { fipsCountyNumericCode }

::= { nadfObjectClass 3 }

usOrganization OBJECT-CLASS

-- organizationName is used for RDN

-- values come from ANSI Alphanumeric Registry

SUBCLASS OF organization

MUST CONTAIN { ansiOrgNumericCode }

MAY CONTAIN { nadfSearchGuide }

::= { nadfObjectClass 4 }

nadfApplicationEntity OBJECT-CLASS

SUBCLASS OF applicationEntity

MUST CONTAIN { supportedApplicationContext }

::= { nadfObjectClass 5 }

nadfADDMD OBJECT-CLASS

-- addmdName is used for RDN

-- values come from NADF Registry (tbd)

SUBCLASS OF top

MUST CONTAIN { addmdName }

MAY CONTAIN { nadfSearchGuide }

::= { nadfObjectClass 6 }

-- auxiliary classes

nadfObject OBJECT-CLASS

SUBCLASS OF top

MAY CONTAIN { supplementaryInformation }

::= { nadfObjectClass 7 }

-- attribute types

fipsStateNumericCode ATTRIBUTE

-- semantics and values defined in US FIPS PUB 5

WITH ATTRIBUTE-SYNTAX

-- leading zero is significant

NumericString (SIZE (2))

MATCHES FOR EQUALITY

::= { nadfAttributeType 1 }

fipsStateAlphaCode ATTRIBUTE

-- semantics and values defined in US FIPS PUB 5

WITH ATTRIBUTE-SYNTAX

PrintableString (SIZE (2))

MATCHES FOR EQUALITY -- case-insensitive

::= { nadfAttributeType 2 }

fipsCountyNumericCode ATTRIBUTE

-- semantics and values defined in US FIPS PUB 6

WITH ATTRIBUTE-SYNTAX

-- leading zeros are significant

NumericString (SIZE (3))

MATCHES FOR EQUALITY

::= { nadfAttributeType 3 }

fipsPlaceNumericCode ATTRIBUTE

-- semantics and values defined in US FIPS PUB 55

WITH ATTRIBUTE-SYNTAX

-- leading zeros are significant

NumericString (SIZE (5))

MATCHES FOR EQUALITY

::= { nadfAttributeType 4 }

ansiOrgNumericCode ATTRIBUTE

-- semantics and values defined in ANSI registry

WITH ATTRIBUTE-SYNTAX

INTEGER

MATCHES FOR EQUALITY

::= { nadfAttributeType 5 }

addmdName ATTRIBUTE

-- semantics and values defined in NADF registry

WITH ATTRIBUTE-SYNTAX caseIgnoreStringSyntax

::= { nadfAttributeType 6 }

nadfSearchGuide ATTRIBUTE

WITH ATTRIBUTE-SYNTAX NadfGuide

::= { nadfAttributeType 7 }

NadfGuide ::=

SET {

objectClass[0]

OBJECT-CLASS,

criteria[1]

Criteria,

subset[2]

INTEGER {

baseObject(0), oneLevel(1), wholeSubtree(2)

} DEFAULT oneLevel

}

supplementaryInformation ATTRIBUTE

WITH ATTRIBUTE-SYNTAX caseIgnoreStringSyntax (SIZE (1..76))

::= { nadfAttributeType 8 }

END

Appendix B: Revision History of this Scheme

The first version of this scheme (NADF-71) was contributed to the

North American Directory Forum at its November 27--30, 1990 meeting.

The (mis)features were:

(1) Because of the lack of confidence in ANSI registration

procedures, it was proposed that the US trademarks be

used as the basis for RDNs of organizations with

national-standing.

This proved unworkable since the same trademark may be

issued to different organizations in different

industries.

(2) There was no pre-existing registry used for populated

places.

This proved unworkable since the effort to define a new

registry is problematic.

The second version of this scheme was contributed to the ANSI

Registration Authority Committee at its January 30, 1991 meeting, and

the IETF OSI Directory Services Working Group at its February 12--13,

1991 meeting. The (mis)features were:

(1) The ANSI numeric name form registry was used as the basis

for RDNs of organizations with national standings.

(2) The FIPS 5 state numeric code was used as the basis for

RDNs of states and state-equivalents.

(3) The FIPS 55 place numeric code was used as the basis for

RDNs of populated places.

The choice of numeric rather than alphanumeric name forms was

unpopular, but was motivated by the desire to avoid using the ANSI

alphanumeric name form registry, which was perceived as unstable.

The third version of this scheme was contributed to US State

Department Study Group D's MHS-MD subcommittee at its March 7--8 1991

meeting. That version used alphanumeric name forms for all objects,

under the perception that the ANSI alphanumeric name form registry

will prove stable. If the ANSI alphanumeric name form registry

proves unstable, then two alternatives are possible:

(1) disallow organizations with national-standing in the US

portion of the DIT; or,

(2) use the ANSI numeric name form registry instead.

Hopefully neither of these two undesirable alternatives will prove

necessary.

The fourth version of this scheme (NADF-103) was contributed to the

North American Directory Forum at its March 18--22, 1990 meeting.

This version introduced the notion of organizations with regional

standing being listed at the national level through the use of alias

names and multi-valued RDNs.

The current (fifth) version of this scheme (NADF-123) generalized the

listing concept by introducing the notion of optimized civil naming.

Further, the document was edited to clearly note the different naming

components and the relation between them.

Security Considerations

Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

Author's Address

North American Directory Forum

c/o Theodore H. Myer

Rapport Communication, Inc.

3055 Q Street NW

Washington, DC 20007

Tel: +1 202-342-2727

 
 
 
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