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RFC 5478


Network Working Group                                            J. Polk
Request for Comments: 5478                                 Cisco Systems
Category: Standards Track                                     March 2009

       IANA Registration of New Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)
                      Resource-Priority Namespaces

Status of This Memo

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

Copyright Notice

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   document authors.  All rights reserved.

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   This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF
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   modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.
   Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling
   the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified
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   not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format
   it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other
   than English.

Abstract

   This document creates additional Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)
   Resource-Priority namespaces to meet the requirements of the US
   Defense Information Systems Agency, and places these namespaces in
   the IANA registry.

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RFC 5478            New SIP RPH Namespaces for DISA           March 2009

Table of Contents

   1. Introduction ....................................................2
      1.1. Conventions Used in This Document ..........................3
   2. New SIP Resource-Priority Namespaces Created ....................3
   3. IANA Considerations .............................................4
      3.1. IANA Resource-Priority Namespace Registration ..............4
      3.2. IANA Priority-Value Registrations ..........................6
   4. Security Considerations .........................................6
   5. Acknowledgments .................................................6
   6. Normative References ............................................6

1.  Introduction

   The US Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) is rolling out their
   Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) based architecture at this time.
   This network will require more Resource-Priority namespaces than were
   defined, and IANA registered, in RFC 4412 [RFC4412].  The purpose of
   this document is to define these additional namespaces.  Each will be
   preemptive in nature, as defined in RFC 4412, and will have the same
   10 priority-values.

   DISA has a requirement to be able to assign different Resource-
   Priority namespaces to differing groups of differing sizes throughout
   their networks.  Examples of this may be

   - namespaces as large as each branch of service (Army, Navy, Air
     Force, Marines, Coast Guard)

   - namespaces for some departments within the government (for example,
     Homeland Security)

   - namespaces that are temporary assignments to individual units of
     varying sizes (from battle groups to patrol groups or platoons)

   These temporary assignments might be combinations of smaller units
   involving several branches of service operating as one unit (say, one
   task force, which is separate than the branch of service), or a
   single commando unit requiring special treatment for a short period
   of time, making it appear separate from the branch of service they
   are from.

   Providing DISA with a pool of namespaces for fine-grained
   assignment(s) allows them the flexibility they need for their mission
   requirements.  One can imagine due to their sheer size and separation
   of purpose, they can easily utilize a significant number of
   namespaces within their networks.  This is the reason for the

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RFC 5478            New SIP RPH Namespaces for DISA           March 2009

   assignment of so many new namespaces, which seems to deviate from
   guidance in RFC 4412 to have as few namespaces as possible.

   This document makes no changes to SIP, it just adds IANA-registered
   namespaces for SIP's use within the Resource-Priority header
   framework.

1.1.  Conventions Used in This Document

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

2.  New SIP Resource-Priority Namespaces Created

   The following 40 SIP namespaces are created by this document:

   dsn-000000      drsn-000000      rts-000000      crts-000000
   dsn-000001      drsn-000001      rts-000001      crts-000001
   dsn-000002      drsn-000002      rts-000002      crts-000002
   dsn-000003      drsn-000003      rts-000003      crts-000003
   dsn-000004      drsn-000004      rts-000004      crts-000004
   dsn-000005      drsn-000005      rts-000005      crts-000005
   dsn-000006      drsn-000006      rts-000006      crts-000006
   dsn-000007      drsn-000007      rts-000007      crts-000007
   dsn-000008      drsn-000008      rts-000008      crts-000008
   dsn-000009      drsn-000009      rts-000009      crts-000009

   Each namespace listed above is wholly different.  However, according
   to the rules within Section 8 of RFC 4412, one or more sets can be
   treated as if they are the same when they are configured as an
   aggregated grouping of namespaces.

   These aggregates of two or more namespaces, that are to be considered
   equivalent during treatment, can be a set of any IANA registered
   namespaces, not just adjacent (i.e., consecutive) namespaces.

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RFC 5478            New SIP RPH Namespaces for DISA           March 2009

   Each namespace listed above will have the same 10 priority levels:

      .0 (lowest priority)
      .1
      .2
      .3
      .4
      .5
      .6
      .7
      .8
      .9 (highest priority)

   According to the rules established in RFC 4412 [RFC4412], priority-
   values have a relative order for preferential treatment, unless one
   or more consecutive groups of priority-values are to be considered
   equivalent (i.e., first-received, first treated).

   The dash character ('-') is just like any other ASCII character
   within a namespace, and is not to be considered a delimiter in any
   official way within any namespace here.  Other namespace definitions
   in the future could change this.

   As stated in Section 9 of RFC 4412 [RFC4412] an IANA-registered
   namespace SHOULD NOT change the number, and MUST NOT change the
   relative priority order, of its assigned priority-values.

3.  IANA Considerations

   Abiding by the rules established within RFC 4412 [RFC4412], this is a
   Standards-Track document registering new namespaces, their associated
   priority-values, and intended algorithms.

3.1.  IANA Resource-Priority Namespace Registration

   Within the "Resource-Priority Namespaces" registry in the sip-
   parameters section of IANA, the following table lists the new
   namespaces registered by this document.

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RFC 5478            New SIP RPH Namespaces for DISA           March 2009

                        Intended     New warn-   New resp.
   Namespace   Levels   Algorithm      code        code     Reference
   ----------  ------  ------------  ---------   ---------  ---------
   dsn-000000    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   dsn-000001    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   dsn-000002    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   dsn-000003    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   dsn-000004    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   dsn-000005    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   dsn-000006    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   dsn-000007    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   dsn-000008    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   dsn-000009    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]

   drsn-000000   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   drsn-000001   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   drsn-000002   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   drsn-000003   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   drsn-000004   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   drsn-000005   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   drsn-000006   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   drsn-000007   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   drsn-000008   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   drsn-000009   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]

   rts-000000    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   rts-000001    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   rts-000002    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   rts-000003    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   rts-000004    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   rts-000005    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   rts-000006    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   rts-000007    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   rts-000008    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   rts-000009    10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]

   crts-000000   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   crts-000001   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   crts-000002   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   crts-000003   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   crts-000004   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   crts-000005   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   crts-000006   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   crts-000007   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   crts-000008   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]
   crts-000009   10     preemption      no          no      [RFC5478]

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RFC 5478            New SIP RPH Namespaces for DISA           March 2009

3.2.  IANA Priority-Value Registrations

   Within the "Resource-Priority Priority-values" registry in the
   sip-parameters section of IANA, the list of priority-values for each
   of the 40 newly created namespaces from Section 3.1 of this
   document, prioritized least to greatest, is registered by the
   following (replicated similar to the following format):

   Namespace: dsn-000000
   Reference: RFC5478 (this document)
   Priority-Values (least to greatest): "0", "1", "2", "3", "4", "5",
   "6", "7", "8", "9"

4.  Security Considerations

   This document has the same Security Considerations as RFC 4412.

5.  Acknowledgments

   To Jeff Hewett for his helpful guidance in this effort.  Thanks to
   Janet Gunn, John Rosenberg, Joel Halpern, Michael Giniger, Henning
   Schulzrinne, Keith Drage, and Suresh Krishnan for their comments.

6.  Normative References

   [RFC4412]  Schulzrinne, H. and J. Polk, "Communications Resource
              Priority for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC
              4412, February 2006.

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

Author's Address

   James Polk
   3913 Treemont Circle
   Colleyville, Texas  76034
   USA

   Phone: +1-817-271-3552
   EMail: jmpolk@cisco.com

Polk                        Standards Track                     [Page 6]