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- Network Working Group D. Sitzler
- Request For Comments: 1302 Merit
- FYI: 12 P. Smith
- Merit
- A. Marine
- SRI
- February 1992
-
-
- Building a Network Information Services Infrastructure
-
- 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.
-
- Abstract
-
- This FYI RFC document is intended for existing Internet Network
- Information Center (NIC) personnel, people interested in establishing
- a new NIC, Internet Network Operations Centers (NOCs), and funding
- agencies interested in contributing to user support facilities. The
- document strives to:
-
- - Define a basic set of essential services that Network
- Information Centers (NICs) will provide to Internet users,
- including new mechanisms that will facilitate the timely
- dissemination of information to the Internet community and
- encourage cooperation among NICs.
-
- - Describe existing NIC services as an aid to Internet users
- and as a model for organizations establishing new NICs.
-
- Acknowledgments
-
- This document reflects the work of the Network Information Services
- Infrastructure (NISI) working group in the User Services area of the
- IETF. Because the working group participants represent a cross-
- section of existing Internet NICs, the opinions expressed herein are
- representative of groups currently providing information services
- within the Internet community.
-
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- Sitzler, Smith, & Marine [Page 1]
-
- RFC 1302 NISI February 1992
-
-
- Table of Contents
-
- 1. PURPOSE........................................................ 2
- 2. DEVELOPMENT GUIDELINES......................................... 3
- 3. DEFINITION OF A NIC AND A NOC.................................. 3
- 4. HISTORY........................................................ 3
- 5. ESSENTIAL NIC FUNCTIONS........................................ 5
- 5.1 Provide Information Resources................................. 5
- 5.2 Support End-Users............................................. 6
- 5.3 Collect and Maintain NIC Referral Information................. 7
- 5.4 Support the NIC Infrastructure................................ 7
- 6. EXAMPLES OF PRESENT NIC SERVICES............................... 8
- 6.1 Direct User Support........................................... 8
- 6.1.1 Referrals................................................... 8
- 6.1.2 User-to-User Communication.................................. 8
- 6.1.3 Application Support......................................... 9
- 6.1.4 Technical Support........................................... 9
- 6.1.5 Emergency Services.......................................... 9
- 6.2 User Training Services........................................ 9
- 6.3 Marketing and Public Relations Services....................... 9
- 6.3.1 Newsletters................................................. 9
- 6.3.2 Other Publications.......................................... 9
- 6.3.3 PR Activities............................................... 9
- 6.4 Information Repository Services............................... 9
- 6.5 Administrative Services....................................... 10
- 7. EXAMPLES OF PRESENT INFORMATION DELIVERY MECHANISMS............ 10
- 8. DATABASE ACCURACY ISSUES....................................... 11
- 9. SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS........................................ 12
- 10. AUTHORS' ADDRESSES............................................ 13
-
- 1. PURPOSE
-
- The purpose of this document is to define the role of NICs in the
- Internet and establish guidelines for new and existing NICs regarding
- the user services they provide. This document is also a move toward
- standardizing NIC services, which will aid in the development of an
- overall information infrastructure that will allow NICs to easily and
- routinely cooperate in assisting users.
-
- NICs for networks that are part of the Internet may be called upon to
- serve users of the greater Internet as well as those of their own
- networks. This responsibility brings with it the added challenge of
- coordinating services with other NICs to better serve the general
- Internet community. Toward that end, this document also proposes
- some easily implemented changes to facilitate the exchange of
- information and services between NICs.
-
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- Sitzler, Smith, & Marine [Page 2]
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- RFC 1302 NISI February 1992
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- 2. DEVELOPMENT GUIDELINES
-
- The NISI working group observed several guidelines when developing
- this FYI RFC.
-
- 1. While recognizing that the new infrastructure should be built
- on existing services, programs, and technology, the working group
- did not want to limit its thinking to the present, preferring to
- consider new approaches and to think toward the future. The goal
- is to move in the direction of an information services
- infrastructure for the National Research and Education Network
- (NREN).
-
- 2. The working group recognizes that a user support system must
- accommodate a diverse user population, from novice to network
- sophisticate.
-
- 3. The working group recognizes that not all NICs are interested
- in providing service at the Internet level nor in providing service
- directly to end users. Some NICs have special areas of interest
- and serve a more limited community. Many campus NICs, for example,
- restrict the scope of their efforts to campus computing activities.
- Therefore, an Internet NIC must have policies, procedures, and
- delivery mechanisms in place to serve not only end-users, but to
- aid other information providers and user support agencies.
-
- 3. DEFINITION OF A NIC AND OF A NOC
-
- A Network Information Center is an organization whose goal is to
- provide informational, administrative, and procedural support,
- primarily to users of its network and, secondarily, to users of the
- greater Internet and to other service agencies.
-
- A Network Operations Center (NOC) is an organization whose goal is to
- oversee and maintain the daily operations of a network. Although
- sometimes one organization may fulfill the duties of both a NIC and a
- NOC, this document assumes NIC functions to be separate from NOC
- functions and addresses NIC functions only. Obviously, however, a
- NIC must work closely with its NOC to ensure users get the best
- service possible.
-
- 4. HISTORY
-
- When the original Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET)
- was formed, SRI was assigned the essential administrative task of
- registering every host on the network and maintaining the Official
- Host Table. This host table was needed to interconnect the hosts
- into a network. SRI also became the repository for the RFCs, most of
-
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- Sitzler, Smith, & Marine [Page 3]
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- RFC 1302 NISI February 1992
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- which were only available in paper copies because a file transfer
- protocol had yet to be specified. Because of its role as a central
- information repository in these ways, SRI became the natural place
- for users to call with questions, and the first NIC was born.
-
- In 1984, the original network split into two networks: the ARPANET
- and the MILNET. The ARPANET was laid to rest in 1990, and the
- original NIC became the Defense Data Network NIC (DDN-NIC). This NIC
- was sometimes referred to as the "SRI-NIC" or sometimes simply as
- "the NIC". Today this NIC is maintained by Government Systems, Inc.,
- and provides information services to the MILNET portion of the DDN,
- as well as performing several administrative duties that serve the
- entire Internet community. SRI continues to provide general Internet
- information services and maintains an FTP repository.
-
- The days of having just one or two networks are long gone. Today,
- the Internet is an international collection of thousands of networks
- interconnected with the TCP/IP protocols. Users of any one of these
- networks can use the network services provided by TCP/IP to reach any
- of the other networks.
-
- There are other major wide area networks, such as BITNET and DECnet
- networks, that are not based on the TCP/IP protocols and are thus not
- considered part of the Internet itself. However, users can
- communicate between these networks and the Internet via electronic
- mail, so Internet NICs often answer questions regarding these
- networks.
-
- NICs exist for many of the networks that make up today's Internet.
- For example, in addition to the MILNET, in the United States there
- are the National Science Foundation Network (NSFNET), the Energy
- Science Network (ESnet), and the NASA Science Internet (NSI). All of
- these networks provide NICs.
-
- BITNET is a non-TCP/IP network that is accessible to the Internet via
- electronic mail. Its administrative organization, the Corporation
- for Research and Educational Networking (CREN), supports NIC services
- for BITNET users.
-
- Many networks in countries other than the United States also provide
- NIC services. For example, such services exist for NORDUnet, which
- connects national networks in the Nordic countries, and JANet, the
- Joint Academic Network in the United Kingdom. The BITNET
- counterparts in Europe and Canada are the European Academic and
- Research Network (EARN) and NetNorth, respectively.
-
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- RFC 1302 NISI February 1992
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- 5. ESSENTIAL NIC FUNCTIONS
-
- Network Information Centers exist to provide services that make using
- the network easier and more attractive to users.
-
- To help meet this goal, four essential NIC functions have been
- identified as those that every Internet NIC should perform. These
- are the basic functions that define the minimum level of Internet
- information service. Each Internet NIC should:
-
- - Provide information resources.
- - Support end-users through direct contact.
- - Collect and maintain NIC referral information.
- - Support the NIC infrastructure.
-
- The level of each service and the exact mechanisms for providing
- these services depend on the needs of the particular network user
- community. Funding, staffing, and implementation issues related to
- these functions are left up to individual NIC organizations.
-
- Presently, only the first two functions, providing information
- resources and directly supporting end-users, are routinely performed
- by Internet NICs. The variety of ways in which these services are
- provided is described more fully in the section on, "Examples of
- Present NIC Services".
-
- The last two functions, collecting information about other NICs and
- supporting the NIC infrastructure, are new roles that have evolved as
- the Internet community and the number of NICs have grown.
-
- Each of these four essential functions is discussed in some depth in
- this section.
-
- 5.1 Provide Information Resources
-
- Information resources refers to both online and hard-copy resources,
- such as online files, marketing information, and newsletters. NICs
- help users gain access to relevant information in several ways.
-
- - Obtain information online from other sites and store
- it at the local NIC where users may access it.
-
- - Refer users to information stored at other locations
- around the Internet. This option requires that each
- NIC maintain up-to-date information regarding such
-
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- Sitzler, Smith, & Marine [Page 5]
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- RFC 1302 NISI February 1992
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- Internet resources.
-
- - Create information, such as newsletters, marketing
- information, tutorial files or documents, and make
- it available to users. In this case, the "creating
- NIC" is solely responsible for the content and
- accuracy of the information provided.
-
- In all of the cases above, users need a way to verify the
- authenticity and currentness of the information. Accordingly, each
- NIC should provide the following information for everything it makes
- available to its users and the Internet community: 1) a time stamp,
- 2) a revision number, and 3) the name of the NIC that produced the
- document. The NIC should also maintain contact information regarding
- the source of a file, but does not necessarily have to include such a
- contact in the online file.
-
- 5.2 Support End-Users
-
- A NIC serves as the principle source of network information for its
- end users. NICs field a variety of user inquiries, such as requests
- for how to get connected to the Internet, how to locate and access a
- particular application on the network, how to determine an e-mail
- address, and how to solve operational problems. Each NIC must take a
- best effort approach to responding to these inquiries and take
- responsibility for a user inquiry until it is resolved in some way.
- Resolution may be answering the question, referring the user to the
- appropriate information source, or coordinating with a NOC to resolve
- a user connectivity problem.
-
- To facilitate this role of information provider, the following
- delivery mechanisms are used:
-
- - Telephone "hotline" support. All NICs need to be
- available to answer phone inquiries during the
- business day.
-
- - Electronic mail. An electronic mail address acts as
- an electronic help desk. For consistency, the
- electronic mail address should be of the form
- NIC@domain (e.g., NIC@DDN.MIL). Such a common
- addressing convention will move toward
- standardization of these "electronic help desks" and
- will increase the chance that users will know where
- to ask for help. In addition, a user inquiry to a
- NIC e-mail address should either produce a human
- response or an up-to-date machine response that
- performs a triage function by advising the user
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- Sitzler, Smith, & Marine [Page 6]
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- RFC 1302 NISI February 1992
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- where to go for particular categories of problems.
- For example, a message to NIC@NSF.NET could return a
- message alerting the user to the NNSC@NNSC.NSF.NET
- and the NSFNET-INFO@MERIT.EDU mailboxes, both of
- which provide information for NSFNET.
-
- - Electronic information transfer. NICs should
- provide information in electronic form, and make it
- available across the Internet through mechanisms
- such as anonymous file transfer, electronic mail,
- and remote databases.
-
- 5.3 Collect and Maintain NIC Referral Information
-
- With the recent dramatic increase in the number of networks, users,
- and applications accessible via the Internet, it is impossible for
- any one NIC to maintain comprehensive, up-to-date information of all
- the services and information available. Because such information is
- distributed among many NICs, it is essential for each NIC to be aware
- of other NICs and their areas of expertise. Such shared information
- among NICs ensures that Internet users will be referred promptly to
- the correct information resource.
-
- In an effort to gather data about NICs and their resources,
- information will be solicited from each NIC and placed in a database
- called "nic-profiles". This database will be available to all NICs.
- Such shared information among NICs ensures that Internet users will
- be referred promptly to the correct information resource. For
- information regarding joining or using the nic-profiles database,
- send a message to nic-forum-request@merit.edu.
-
- 5.4 Support the NIC Infrastructure
-
- It is essential that each NIC take an active part in supporting the
- NIC/Internet infrastructure. Two means of providing such support are
- suggested here.
-
- - Attend the IETF User Services Working Group (USWG).
- NICs are encouraged to participate in the USWG, an
- ongoing working group of the IETF, which is
- chartered to identify, discuss, and recommend
- solutions to user service issues. The group meets
- regularly at the IETF meetings. (Information about
- IETF meeting schedules, etc., is available for
- anonymous FTP from nnsc.nsf.net. The directory is
- ietf.) The USWG has spawned a variety of working
- groups dealing with specific user service topics.
- To join the USWG mailing list send an e-mail request
-
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- RFC 1302 NISI February 1992
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- to uswg-request@nnsc.nsf.net.
-
- - Participate in nic-forum. An electronic mailing
- list, "nic-forum", will provide NIC personnel with a
- means of soliciting information from other NICs,
- offering solutions to common problems, and posting
- information of general interest. A NIC can register
- in the nic-forum, as well as provide information for
- the nic-profiles database, by sending a message to
- nic-forum-request@nsf.net.
-
- 6. EXAMPLES OF PRESENT NIC SERVICES
-
- There are a variety of ways through which existing NICs fulfill the
- basic requirements previously indicated under "Essential NIC
- Functions".
-
- Today's Internet NICs provide network users with a wide array of
- value-added services. The types and levels of services vary for any
- particular NIC depending on a number of issues such as funding,
- audience served, available resources, and mission of the network
- organization.
-
- An overview of some of the services offered today by Internet NICs is
- listed below. This overview provides examples of the essential
- services recommended earlier, and also gives a flavor of the many
- avenues through which value-added user services are provided. This
- section provides examples, not recommendations.
-
- 6.1 Direct User Support
-
- The main objective of a Network Information Center is to provide
- support for network users. Most NICs provide both telephone and
- electronic mail hotlines for convenient user access. Existing NICs
- also often serve as intermediaries between users and the technical
- experts who provide specific information. Because NICs interact
- directly with end-users, they can frequently evaluate their services,
- and modify them to accommodate changing user needs.
-
- 6.1.1 Referrals. Today's NICs are aware of other Internet resources
- and keep such referral information as up-to-date as possible.
-
- 6.1.2 User-to-User Communication. NICs can facilitate interactions
- between network users. Often this is done through conferencing
- or electronic mail. For example, a NIC can set up a computer
- conference dealing with a specific discipline or perhaps a
- specific topic so that users can share ideas and information
- with each other. Some NICs establish special interest groups and
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- hold in-person meetings to promote the exchange of information
- between their users.
-
- 6.1.3 Application Support. NICs often provide user support for
- specific host applications in addition to providing information
- and support about the network to which the host is attached.
-
- 6.1.4 Technical Support. Technical experts are available at NIC
- locations or elsewhere to trouble shoot user problems. The range
- and variety of technical expertise varies with the organization.
-
- 6.1.5 Emergency Services. Most NICs provide immediate notification to
- users of impending events that may affect their network usage.
- This is often done through electronic mail bulletins which state
- the particular event, its impact, and its duration.
-
- 6.2 User Training Services
-
- NICs sponsor seminars, classes, and training workshops intended to
- assist users in understanding the network environment. These
- training events range from general "what is the Internet" to
- workshops on specific topics such as how to use a super-computer
- application.
-
- 6.3 Marketing and Public Relations Services
-
- 6.3.1 Newsletters. Some Internet NICs publish newsletters which are
- used to inform subscribers about network developments and tools,
- and as marketing documents to try to get more organizations to
- attach to the network.
-
- 6.3.2 Other Publications. Many NICs also produce a variety of
- general purpose brochures and "how-to" documents which are
- distributed to potential network users.
-
- 6.3.3 PR Activities. NICs may be involved in a variety of public
- relations activities from writing and distributing press releases
- about new network developments to holding press conferences to
- announce significant technological events.
-
- 6.4 Information Repository Services
-
- An important activity of NICs is producing and/or collecting
- information of interest to their users. Most NICs provide
- hardware to store such information online and distribute the
- information to their users both electronically and in hard-copy
- form.
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- 6.5 Administrative Services
-
- Many NICs perform registration services, such as registering user
- information in a white pages database, keeping a record of hosts on
- their networks, or keeping a record of contacts for hosts, networks,
- or domains.
-
- 7. EXAMPLES OF PRESENT INFORMATION DELIVERY MECHANISMS
-
- Information is delivered to network users via a wide variety of
- mechanisms. The most common methods are electronic mail and file
- transfer protocol (FTP); however, information is also relayed via the
- telephone, FAX machines, U.S. mail, and in-person seminars, as well
- as via electronic bulletin boards and remote database access. NICs
- are always looking for ways of making information broadly accessible
- so that the maximum number of network users can use it effectively.
-
- The following table lists the various information delivery methods
- used in the Internet today, and notes the kind of information
- distributed using each method.
-
-
- ______________________________________________________________________
-
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- Table 1: AVAILABLE INFORMATION AND DELIVERY MECHANISMS
-
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- Delivery Mechanism Type of Information Available
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- FTP Network maps, functional specs,
- draft RFCs, newsletters,
- protocols, any information in
- a file: ASCII, binary, etc.
-
- electronic mail General information, newsletters,
- announcements, security alerts,
- network status information
-
- bulletin board General information, announcements,
- source code
-
- hard copy Newsletters, user guides, resource
- guides, press releases, promotional
- information
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- presentations/seminars Network applications, technology
- trends, technical overviews,
- general information about Internet
- environment, TCP/IP overviews
-
- Telnet Remote systems, applications
-
- person-to-person Answers to specific questions,
- contact information, referrals
-
- electronic conference Other users, discipline-specific
- information
-
- information services General information, promotional
- information, local interest
- information
-
- directory services Phone book information (white
- pages, and eventually yellow pages)
-
- library services Bibliographies, full text,
- references
-
- phone Specific requests, contacts,
- referrals, connecting assistance
-
- U.S. mail Newsletters, user guides
-
- FAX Variety of printed material
-
- Finger, whois User data
-
-
- ______________________________________________________________________
-
- 8. DATABASE ACCURACY ISSUES
-
- As has been mentioned elsewhere in this paper, NICs often are the
- sites of databases of various types of information, which are
- maintained for various reasons. It is recommended that NICs
- emphasize the importance of keeping such data as accurate as
- possible. In addition, it is important to allow people some control
- over personal information about them that may reside in a NIC
- database, especially if the information will be available publicly.
-
- It is recommended that, as part of the process of collecting
- information for a database, a NIC should disclose the following
- information to those supplying data:
-
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- - Why the information is being collected and how it will be used.
- - What the consequences are of not providing the asked for data or
- of revoking data in a database.
- - Which information asked for is mandatory and which is optional.
- - Which information will be made public.
- - How the data can be updated and who may provide updates.
- - How and how often the NIC will solicit for data updates.
-
- A NIC should actively seek updates to its data at least once a year.
- The date publicly available data was last updated should be part of
- the public information available about that data. In general, users
- should know when personal information about them is available in a
- public database, and have the opportunity to change it or revoke it.
-
- 9. SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
-
- Because NICs interact directly with network users, they will have to
- deal with network and host security issues at times. NICs should be
- aware of those agencies and groups on the Internet that have the
- responsibility of handling security incidents so that users can be
- properly referred when necessary, and so the NICs themselves have
- resources to call on should a major incident occur. NICs should be
- aware of security issues and security information resources, such as
- network mailing lists and the Site Security Handbook (FYI 8, RFC
- 1244), and advocate the importance of security considerations to
- their users. NICs should have explicit procedures in place to follow
- in the event of a security incident. Such procedures will probably
- include the means of interacting with both response centers and NOCs,
- as well as with users.
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- 10. AUTHORS' ADDRESSES
-
- Dana D. Sitzler
- Merit Network, Inc
- 1075 Beal Avenue
- Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2112
-
- Phone: (313) 936-2648
- EMail: dds@merit.edu
-
-
- Patricia G. Smith
- Merit Network, Inc
- 1075 Beal Avenue
- Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2112
-
- Phone: (313) 936-3000
- EMail: psmith@merit.edu
-
-
- April N. Marine
- SRI International
- Network Information Systems Center
- 333 Ravenswood Avenue, EJ294
- Menlo Park, CA 94025-3493
-
- Phone: (415) 859-5318
- EMail: april@nisc.sri.com
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