One document matched: draft-ietf-lmap-information-model-04.xml
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<rfc category="std" docName="draft-ietf-lmap-information-model-04"
ipr="trust200902">
<front>
<title abbrev="LMAP Information Model">Information Model for Large-Scale
Measurement Platforms (LMAP)</title>
<author fullname="Trevor Burbridge" initials="T." surname="Burbridge">
<organization>BT</organization>
<address>
<postal>
<street>Adastral Park, Martlesham Heath</street>
<city>Ipswich</city>
<region/>
<code>IP5 3RE</code>
<country>United Kingdom</country>
</postal>
<email>trevor.burbridge@bt.com</email>
</address>
</author>
<author fullname="Philip Eardley" initials="P." surname="Eardley">
<organization>BT</organization>
<address>
<postal>
<street>Adastral Park, Martlesham Heath</street>
<city>Ipswich</city>
<region/>
<code>IP5 3RE</code>
<country>United Kingdom</country>
</postal>
<email>philip.eardley@bt.com</email>
</address>
</author>
<author fullname="Marcelo Bagnulo" initials="M." surname="Bagnulo">
<organization>Universidad Carlos III de Madrid</organization>
<address>
<postal>
<street>Av. Universidad 30</street>
<city>Leganes, Madrid</city>
<region/>
<code>28911</code>
<country>Spain</country>
</postal>
<email>marcelo@it.uc3m.es</email>
</address>
</author>
<author fullname="Juergen Schoenwaelder" initials="J."
surname="Schoenwaelder">
<organization>Jacobs University Bremen</organization>
<address>
<postal>
<street>Campus Ring 1</street>
<city>Bremen</city>
<region/>
<code>28759</code>
<country>Germany</country>
</postal>
<email>j.schoenwaelder@jacobs-university.de</email>
</address>
</author>
<date day="5" month="March" year="2015"/>
<abstract>
<t>This Information Model applies to the Measurement Agent within a
Large-Scale Measurement Platform. As such it outlines the information
that is (pre-)configured on the MA or exists in communications with a
Controller or Collector within an LMAP framework. The purpose of such an
Information Model is to provide a protocol and device independent view
of the MA that can be implemented via one or more Control and Report
protocols.</t>
</abstract>
<note title="Requirements Language">
<t>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 <xref
target="RFC2119">RFC 2119</xref>.</t>
</note>
</front>
<middle>
<section title="Introduction">
<t>A large-scale measurement platform is a collection of components that
work in a coordinated fashion to perform measurements from a large
number of vantage points. The main components of a large-scale
measurement platform are the Measurement Agents (hereafter MAs), the
Controller(s) and the Collector(s).</t>
<t>The MAs are the elements actually performing the measurements. The
MAs are controlled by exactly one Controller at a time and the
Collectors gather the results generated by the MAs. In a nutshell, the
normal operation of a large-scale measurement platform starts with the
Controller instructing a set of one or more MAs to perform a set of one
or more Measurement Tasks at a certain point in time. The MAs execute
the instructions from a Controller, and once they have done so, they
report the results of the measurements to one or more Collectors. The
overall framework for a Large Measurement platform as used in this
document is described in detail in <xref
target="I-D.ietf-lmap-framework"/>.</t>
<t>A large-scale measurement platform involves basically three types of
protocols, namely, a Control protocol (or protocols) between a
Controller and the MAs, a Report protocol (or protocols) between the MAs
and the Collector(s) and several measurement protocols between the MAs
and Measurement Peers (MPs), used to actually perform the measurements.
In addition some information is required to be configured on the MA
prior to any communication with a Controller.</t>
<t>This document defines the information model for both Control and the
Report protocols along with pre-configuration information that is
required on the MA before communicating with the Controller, broadly
named as the LMAP Information Model. The measurement protocols are out
of the scope of this document.</t>
<t>As defined in <xref target="RFC3444"/>, the LMAP Information Model
(henceforth also referred to as LMAP IM) defines the concepts involved
in a large-scale measurement platform at a high level of abstraction,
independent of any specific implementation or actual protocol used to
exchange the information. It is expected that the proposed information
model can be used with different protocols in different measurement
platform architectures and across different types of MA devices (e.g.,
home gateway, smartphone, PC, router).</t>
<t>The definition of an Information Model serves a number of
purposes:</t>
<t><list style="numbers">
<t>To guide the standardisation of one or more Control and Report
protocols and data models</t>
<t>To enable high-level inter-operability between different Control
and Report protocols by facilitating translation between their
respective data models such that a Controller could instruct
sub-populations of MAs using different protocols</t>
<t>To form agreement of what information needs to be held by an MA
and passed over the Control and Report interfaces and support the
functionality described in the LMAP framework</t>
<t>Enable existing protocols and data models to be assessed for
their suitability as part of a large-scale measurement system</t>
</list></t>
<t/>
</section>
<section title="Notation">
<t>This document use an object-oriented programming-like notation to
define the parameters (names/values) of the objects of the information
model. An optional field is enclosed by [ ], and an array is indicated
by two numbers in angle brackets, <m..n>, where m indicates the
minimal number of values, and n is the maximum. The symbol * for n means
no upper bound.</t>
</section>
<section title="LMAP Information Model">
<t>The information described herein relates to the information stored,
received or transmitted by a Measurement Agent as described within the
LMAP framework <xref target="I-D.ietf-lmap-framework"/>. As such, some
subsets of this information model are applicable to the measurement
Controller, Collector and any device management system that
pre-configures the Measurement Agent. The information described in these
models will be transmitted by protocols using interfaces between the
Measurement Agent and such systems according to a Data Model.</t>
<t>For clarity the information model is divided into six sections:</t>
<t><list style="numbers">
<t>Pre-Configuration Information. Information pre-configured on the
Measurement Agent prior to any communication with other components
of the LMAP architecture (i.e., the Controller, Collector and
Measurement Peers), specifically detailing how to communicate with a
Controller and whether the device is enabled to participate as an
MA.</t>
<t>Configuration Information. Update of the pre-configuration
information during the registration of the MA or subsequent
communication with the Controller, along with the configuration of
further parameters about the MA (rather than the Tasks it should
perform) that were not mandatory for the initial communication
between the MA and a Controller.</t>
<t>Instruction Information. Information that is received by the MA
from the Controller pertaining to the Tasks that should be executed.
This includes the task execution Schedules (other than the
Controller communication Schedule supplied as (pre)configuration
information) and related information such as the Task Configuration,
communication Channels to Collectors and schedule Timing
information. It also includes Task Suppression information that is
used to over-ride normal Task execution.</t>
<t>Logging Information. Information transmitted from the MA to the
Controller detailing the results of any configuration operations
along with error and status information from the operation of the
MA.</t>
<t>Capability and Status Information. Information on the general
status and capabilities of the MA. For example, the set of
measurements that are supported on the device.</t>
<t>Reporting Information. Information transmitted from the MA to one
or more Collectors including measurement results and the context in
which they were conducted.</t>
</list></t>
<t>In addition the MA may hold further information not described herein,
and which may be optionally transferred to or from other systems
including the Controller and Collector. One example of information in
this category is subscriber or line information that may be extracted by
a task and reported by the MA in the reporting communication to a
Collector.</t>
<t>It should also be noted that the MA may be in communication with
other management systems which may be responsible for configuring and
retrieving information from the MA device. Such systems, where
available, can perform an important role in transferring the
pre-configuration information to the MA or enabling/disabling the
measurement functionality of the MA.</t>
<t>The Information Model is divided into sub-sections for a number of
reasons. Firstly the grouping of information facilitates reader
understanding. Secondly, the particular groupings chosen are expected to
map to different protocols or different transmissions within those
protocols.</t>
<t>The granularity of data transmitted in each operation of the Control
and Report Protocols is not dictated by the Information Model. For
example, the Instruction object may be delivered in a single operation.
Alternatively, Schedules and Task Configurations may be separated or
even each Schedule/Task Configuration may be delivered individually.
Similarly the Information Model does not dictate whether data is read,
write, or read/write. For example, some Control Protocols may have the
ability to read back Configuration and Instruction information which
have been previously set on the MA. Lastly, while some protocols may
simply overwrite information (for example refreshing the entire
Instruction Information), other protocols may have the ability to update
or delete selected items of information.</t>
<t>The information in these six sections is captured by a number of
common information objects. These objects are also described later in
this document and comprise of:</t>
<t><list style="numbers">
<t>Schedules. A set of Schedules tell the MA to do something.
Without a Schedule no Task (from a measurement to reporting or
communicating with the Controller) is ever executed. Schedules are
used within the Instruction to specify what tasks should be
performed, when, and how to direct their results. A Schedule is also
used within the pre-Configuration and Configuration information in
order to execute the Task or Tasks required to communicate with the
Controller.</t>
<t>Channels. A set of Channel objects are used to communicate with a
number of endpoints (i.e. the Controller and Collectors). Each
Channel object contains the information required for the
communication with a single endpoint such as the target location and
security details.</t>
<t>Task Configurations. A set of Task Configurations is used to
configure the Tasks that are run by the MA. This includes the
registry entry for the Task and any configuration parameters. Task
Configurations are referenced from a Schedule in order to specify
what Tasks the MA should execute.</t>
<t>Timings. A set of Timing objects that can be referenced from the
Schedules. Each Schedule always references exactly one Timing
object. A Timing object specfies either a singleton or series of
time events. They are used to indicate when Tasks should be
executed.</t>
</list>The following diagram illustrates the structure in which these
common information objects are referenced. The references are achieved
by each object (Task Configuration, Timing) being given a short text
name that is used by other objects. The objects shown in parenthesis are
part of the internal object structure of a Schedule. Channels are not
shown in the diagram since they are only used as an option by selected
Task Configurations but are similarly referenced using a short text
name.</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[ Schedule
|----------> Timing
|----------> (Scheduled Tasks)
|----------> Task Configuration
|----------> Destination Tasks
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t/>
<t>It should be clear that the top-level bahaviour of an MA is simply to
execute Schedules. Every action referenced by a Schedule is defined as a
Task. As such, these actions are configured through Task Configurations
and executed according to the Timing referenced by the Schedule in which
they appear. Tasks can implement a variety of different types of
actions. While in terms of the Information Model, all Tasks have the
same structure, it can help conceptually to think of different Task
categories:</t>
<t><list style="numbers">
<t>Measurement Tasks measure some aspect of network performance or
traffic. They may also capture contextual information from the MA
device or network interfaces such as the device type or interface
speed.</t>
<t>Data Transfer Tasks <list style="letters">
<t>Reporting Tasks report the results of Measurement Tasks to
Collectors</t>
<t>Control Task(s) implement the Control Protocol and
communicate with the Controller. Depending on the Control
Protocol there may be a number of specialist tasks such as:
Configuration Task; Instruction Task; Suppression Task;
Capabilities Task; Logging Task etc.</t>
</list></t>
<t>Data Analysis Tasks can exist to analyse data from other
Measurement Tasks locally on the MA</t>
<t>Data Management Tasks may exist to clean-up, filter or compress
data on the MA such as Measurement Task results</t>
</list></t>
<t/>
<section title="Pre-Configuration Information">
<t>This information is the minimal information that needs to be
pre-configured to the MA in order for it to successfully communicate
with a Controller during the registration process. Some of the
Pre-Configuration Information elements are repeated in the
Configuration Information in order to allow an LMAP Controller to
update these items. The pre-configuration information also contains
some elements that are not under the control of the LMAP framework
(such as the device identifier and device security credentials).</t>
<t>This Pre-Configuration Information needs to include a URL of the
initial Controller from where configuration information can be
communicated along with the security information required for the
communication including the certificate of the Controller (or the
certificate of the Certification Authority which was used to issue the
certificate for the Controller). All this is expressed as a Channel.
While multiple Channels may be provided in the Pre-Configuration
Information they must all be associated with a single Controller (e.g.
over different interfaces or network protocols).</t>
<t>Where the MA pulls information from the Controller, the
Pre-Configuration Information also needs to contain the timing of the
communication with the Controller as well as the nature of the
communication itself (such as the protocol and data to be
transferred). The timing is given as a Schedule that executes the
Task(s) responsible for communication with the Controller. It is this
Task (or Tasks) that implement the Control protocol between the MA and
the Controller and utilises the Channel information. The Task(s) may
take additional parameters in which case a Task Configuration can also
be included.</t>
<t>Even where information is pushed to the MA from the Controller
(rather than pulled by the MA), a Schedule still needs to be supplied.
In this case the Schedule will simply execute a Controller listener
task when the MA is started. A Channel is still required for the MA to
establish secure communication with the Controller.</t>
<t>It can be seen that these Channels, Schedules and Task
Configurations for the initial MA-Controller communication are no
different in terms of the Information Model to any other Channel,
Schedule or Task Configuration that might execute a Measurement Task
or report the measurement results (as described later).</t>
<t>The MA may be pre-configured with an MA ID, or may use a Device ID
in the first Controller contact before it is assigned an MA ID. The
Device ID may be a MAC address or some other device identifier
expressed as a URN. If the MA ID is not provided at this stage then it
must be provided by the Controller during Configuration.</t>
<t>Detail of the information model elements:</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// MA pre-configuration minimal information to communicate
// initially with Controller
object {
[uuid ma-agent-id;]
ma-task-obj ma-control-tasks<1..*>;
ma-channel-obj ma-control-channels<1..*>;
ma-schedule-obj ma-control-schedules<1..*>;
[urn ma-device-id;]
credentials ma-credentials;
} ma-config-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t>The details of the Channel and Schedule objects are described later
since they are common to several parts of the information model.</t>
</section>
<section title="Configuration Information">
<t>During registration or at any later point at which the MA contacts
the Controller (or vice-versa), the choice of Controller, details for
the timing of communication with the Controller or parameters for the
communication Task(s) can be changed (as captured by the Channels,
Schedules and Task Configurations objects). For example the
pre-configured Controller (specified as a Channel or Channels) may be
over-ridden with a specific Controller that is more appropriate to the
MA device type, location or characteristics of the network (e.g.
access technology type or broadband product). The initial
communication Schedule may be over-ridden with one more relevant to
routine communications between the MA and the Controller.</t>
<t>While some Control protocols may only use a single Schedule, other
protocols may use several Schedules (and related data transfer Tasks)
to update the Configuration Information, transfer the Instruction
Information, transfer Capability and Status Information and send other
information to the Controller such as log or error notifications.
Multiple Channels may be used to communicate with the same Controller
over multiple interfaces (e.g. to send logging information over a
different network).</t>
<t>In addition the MA will be given further items of information that
relate specifically to the MA rather than the measurements it is to
conduct or how to report results. The assignment of an ID to the MA is
mandatory. If the MA Agent ID was not optionally provided during the
pre-configuration then one must be provided by the Controller during
Configuration. Optionally a Group ID may also be given which
identifies a group of interest to which that MA belongs. For example
the group could represent an ISP, broadband product, technology,
market classification, geographic region, or a combination of multiple
such characteristics. Where the Measurement Group ID is set an
additional flag (the Report MA ID flag) is required to control whether
the Measurement Agent ID is also to be reported. The reporting of a
Group ID without the MA ID allows the MA to remain anonymous, which
may be particularly useful to prevent tracking of mobile MA
devices.</t>
<t>Optionally an MA can also be configured to stop executing any
Instruction Schedule if the Controller is unreachable. This can be
used as a fail-safe to stop Measurement and other Tasks being
conducted when there is doubt that the Instruction Information is
still valid. This is simply represented as a time window in
milliseconds since the last communication with the Controller after
which Instruction Schedules are to be suspended. The appropriate value
of the time window will depend on the specified communication Schedule
with the Controller and the duration for which the system is willing
to tolerate continued operation with potentially stale Instruction
Information.</t>
<t>While Pre-Configuration Information is persistent upon device reset
or power cycle, the persistency of the Configuration Information may
be device dependent. Some devices may revert back to their
pre-configuration state upon reboot or factory reset, while other
devices may store all Configuration and Instruction information in
persistent storage. A Controller can check whether an MA has the
latest Configuration and Instruction information by examining the
Capability and Status information for the MA.</t>
<t>It should be noted that control shcedules and tasks cannot be
suppressed as evidenced by the lack of suppression information in the
Configuration. The control schedule must only reference tasks listed
as control tasks (i.e. within the Configuration information). Any
suppress-by-default flag against control tasks will be ignored.</t>
<t>Detail of the additional and updated information model
elements:</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// MA Configuration
object {
uuid ma-agent-id;
ma-task-obj ma-control-tasks<1..*>;
ma-channel-obj ma-control-channels<1..*>;
ma-schedule-obj ma-control-schedules<1..*>;
[urn ma-device-id;]
credentials ma-credentials;
[string ma-group-id;]
[boolean ma-report-ma-id-flag;]
[int ma-control-channel-failure-threshold;]
} ma-config-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section title="Instruction Information">
<t>The Instruction information model has four sub-elements:</t>
<t><list style="numbers">
<t>Instruction Task Configurations</t>
<t>Report Channels</t>
<t>Instruction Schedules</t>
<t>Suppression</t>
</list></t>
<t>The Instruction supports the execution of all Tasks on the MA
except those that deal with communication with the Controller
(specified in (pre-)configuration information). The Tasks are
configured in Instruction Task Configurations and included by
reference in Instruction Schedules that specify when to execute them.
The results can be communicated to other Tasks or a Task may implement
a Reporting Protocol and communicate results over Report Channels.
Suppression is used to temporarily stop the execution of new Tasks as
specified by the Instruction Schedules (and optionally to stop ongoing
Tasks).</t>
<t>A Task Configuration is used to configure the mandatory and
optional parameters of a Task. It also serves to instruct the MA about
the Task including the ability to resolve the Task to an executable
and specifying the schema for the Task parameters.</t>
<t>A Report Channel defines how to communicate with a single remote
system specified by a URL. A Report Channel is used to send results to
single Collector but is no different in terms of the Information Model
to the Control Channel used to transfer information between the MA and
the Controller. Several Report Channels can be defined to enable
results to be split or duplicated across different destinations. A
single Channel can be used by multiple (reporting) Task Configurations
to transfer data to the same Collector. A single Reporting Task
Configuration can also be included in multiple Schedules. E.g. a
single Collector may receive data at three different cycle rates, one
Schedule reporting hourly, another reporting daily and a third
specifying that results should be sent immediately for on-demand
measurement tasks. Alternatively multiple Report Channels can be used
to send Measurement Task results to different Collectors. The details
of the Channel element is described later as it is common to several
objects.</t>
<t>Instruction Schedules specify which Tasks to execute according to a
given Timing (that can execute a single or repeated series of Tasks).
The Schedule also specifies how to link Tasks output data to other
scheduled Tasks - i.e. sending selected outputs to other Tasks.</t>
<t>Measurement Suppression information is used to over-ride the
Instruction Schedule and temporarily stop measurements or other Tasks
from running on the MA for a defined or indefinite period. While
conceptually measurements can be stopped by simply removing them from
the Measurement Schedule, splitting out separate information on
Measurement Suppression allows this information to be updated on the
MA on a different timing cycle or protocol implementation to the
Measurement Schedule. It is also considered that it will be easier for
a human operator to implement a temporary explicit suppression rather
than having to move to a reduced Schedule and then roll-back at a
later time.</t>
<t>The explicit Suppression instruction message is able to simply
enable/disable all Instruction Tasks (that are enabled for default
suppression) as well as having fine control on which Tasks are
suppressed. Suppression of both specified Task Configurations and
Measurement Schedules is supported. Support for disabling specific
Task Configurations allows malfunctioning or mis-configured Tasks or
Task Configurations that have an impact on a particular part of the
network infrastructure (e.g., a particular Measurement Peer) to be
targeted. Support for disabling specific Schedules allows for
particularly heavy cycles or sets of less essential Measurement Tasks
to be suppressed quickly and effectively. Note that Suppression has no
effect on either Controller Tasks or Controller Schedules.</t>
<t>When no tasks or schedules are explicitly listed, all Instruction
tasks will be suppressed (or not) as indicated by the
suppress-by-default flag in the Task Configuration. If tasks or
schedules are listed explicitly then only these listed tasks or
schedules will be suppressed regardless of the suppress-by-default
flag. If both individual tasks and individual schedules are listed
then only the listed schedules, plus the listed tasks where present in
other schedules, will be suppressed regardless of the
suppress-by-default flag.</t>
<t>Suppression stops new Tasks from executing. In addition, the
Suppression information also supports an additional Boolean that is
used to select whether on-going tasks are also to be terminated.</t>
<t>Unsuppression is achieved through either overwriting the
Measurement Suppression information (e.g. changing 'enabled' to False)
or through the use of an End time such that the Measurement
Suppression will no longer be in effect beyond this time. The datetime
format used for all elements in the information model (e.g. the
suppression start and end dates) MUST conform to RFC 3339 <xref
target="RFC3339"/>.</t>
<t>The goal when defining these four different elements is to allow
each part of the information model to change without affecting the
other three elements. For example it is envisaged that the Report
Channels and the set of Task Configurations will be relatively static.
The Instruction Schedule, on the other hand, is likely to be more
dynamic, as the measurement panel and test frequency are changed for
various business goals. Another example is that measurements can be
suppressed with a Suppression command without removing the existing
Instruction Schedules that would continue to apply after the
Suppression expires or is removed. In terms of the Controller-MA
communication this can reduce the data overhead. It also encourages
the re-use of the same standard Task Configurations and Reporting
Channels to help ensure consistency and reduce errors.</t>
<t>Definition of the information model elements:</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Instruction to the MA to configure Tasks, Channels,
//Schedules and Suppression
object {
ma-task-obj ma-instruction-tasks<0..*>;
ma-channel-obj ma-report-channels<0..*>;
ma-schedule-obj ma-instruction-schedules<0..*>;
ma-suppression-obj ma-suppression;
} ma-instruction-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Suppression object to temporarily override new task execution
// in Instructions and optionally stop currently running tasks
object {
boolean ma-suppression-enabled;
[boolean ma-suppression-stop-ongoing-tasks;]
// default: false
[datetime ma-suppression-start;] // default: immediate
[datetime ma-suppression-end;] // default: indefinite
[string ma-suppression-task-names<0..*>;]
// default: all tasks if
// ma-suppression-task-names is empty
[string ma-suppression-schedule-names<0..*>;]
// default: all schedules if
// ma-suppression-schedule-names is empty
} ma-suppression-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section title="Logging Information">
<t>The MA may report on the success or failure of Configuration or
Instruction communications from the Controller. In addition further
operational logs may be produced during the operation of the MA and
updates to capabilities may also be reported. Reporting this
information is achieved in exactly the same manner as scheduling any
other Task. We make no distinction between a Measurement Task
conducting an active or passive network measurement and one which
solely retrieves static or dynamic information from the MA such as
capabilities or logging information. One or more logging tasks can be
programmed or configured to capture subsets of the Logging
Information. These logging tasks are then executed by Schedules which
also specify that the resultant data is to be transferred over the
Controller Channels.</t>
<t>The type of Logging Information will fall into three different
categories:</t>
<t><list style="numbers">
<t>Success/failure/warning messages in response to information
updates from the Controller. Failure messages could be produced
due to some inability to receive or parse the Controller
communication, or if the MA is not able to act as instructed. For
example:<list style="symbols">
<t>"Measurement Schedules updated OK"</t>
<t>"Unable to parse JSON"</t>
<t>"Missing mandatory element: Measurement Timing"</t>
<t>"'Start' does not conform to schema - expected
datetime"</t>
<t>"Date specified is in the past"</t>
<t>"'Hour' must be in the range 1..24"</t>
<t>"Schedule A refers to non-existent Measurement Task
Configuration"</t>
<t>"Measurement Task Configuration X registry entry Y not
found"</t>
<t>"Updated Measurement Task Configurations do not include M
used by Measurement Schedule N"</t>
</list></t>
<t>Operational updates from the MA. For example:<list
style="symbols">
<t>“Out of memory: cannot record result”</t>
<t>“Collector ‘collector.example.com’ not
responding”</t>
<t>"Unexpected restart"</t>
<t>"Suppression timeout"</t>
<t>"Failed to execute Measurement Task Configuration H"</t>
</list></t>
<t>Status updates from the MA. For example:<list style="symbols">
<t>“Device interface added: eth3 ”</t>
<t>“Supported measurements updated”</t>
<t>"New IP address on eth0: xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx"</t>
</list></t>
</list></t>
<t>This Information Model document does not detail the precise format
of logging information since it is to a large extent protocol and MA
specific. However, some common information can be identified.</t>
<t>MA Logging information model elements:</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Logging object
object {
uuid ma-log-agent-id;
datetime ma-log-event-time;
code ma-log-code;
string ma-log-description;
} ma-log-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t/>
</section>
<section title="Capability and Status Information">
<t>The MA will hold Capability Information that can be retrieved by a
Controller. Capabilities include the device interface details
available to Measurement Tasks as well as the set of Measurement
Tasks/Roles (specified by a registry entry) that are actually
installed or available on the MA. Status information includes the
times that operations were last performed such as contacting the
Controller or producing Reports.</t>
<t>MA Status information model elements:</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Main MA Status information object
object {
uuid ma-agent-id;
urn ma-device-id;
string ma-hardware;
string ma-firmware;
string ma-version;
ma-interface-obj ma-interfaces<0..*>;
ma-task-capability-obj ma-supported-tasks<0..*>;
datetime ma-last-started;
[ma-condition-obj ma-conditions<0..*>;]
[ma-task-status-obj ma-task-status<0..*>;]
} ma-status-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Per-Task status information and conditions
object {
string ma-task-name;
string ma-task-role;
uri ma-task-registry;
datetime ma-task-last-invocation;
datetime ma-task-last-successful;
string ma-task-last-successful-message;
datetime ma-task-last-failed;
string ma-task-last-failed-message;
[ma-condition-obj ma-task-conditions<0..*>];
} ma-task-status-obj
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Additional status conditions
object {
int ma-condition-code;
string ma-condition-text;
} ma-condition-obj
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Interface information
object {
string ma-interface-name;
string ma-interface-type;
[int ma-interface-speed;] // bps
[string ma-link-layer-address;]
[ip-address ma-interface-ip-addresses<0..*>];
[ip-address ma-interface-gateways<0..*>;]
[ip-address ma-interface-dns-servers<0..*>;]
} ma-interface-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Supported tasks/roles
object {
string ma-task-name;
string ma-task-role;
uri ma-task-registry;
} ma-task-capability-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section title="Reporting Information">
<t>At a point in time specified by a Schedule, the MA will execute a
task or tasks that communicate a set of measurement results to the
Collector. These Reporting Tasks will be configured to transmit task
results over a specified Report Channel to a Collector. </t>
<t>It should be noted that the output from Tasks does not need to be
sent to communication Channels. It can alternatively, or additionally,
be sent to other Tasks on the MA. This facilitates using a first
Measurement Task to control the operation of a later Measurement Task
(such as first probing available line speed and then adjusting the
operation of a video testing measurement) and also to allow local
processing of data to output alarms (e.g. when performance drops from
earlier levels). Of course, subsequent Tasks also include Tasks that
implement the reporting protocol(s) and transfer data to one or more
Collector(s).</t>
<t>The Report generated by a Reporting Task is structured
hierarchically to avoid repetition of report header and Measurement
Task Configuration information. The report starts with the timestamp
of the report generation on the MA and details about the MA including
the optional Measurement Agent ID and Group ID (controlled by the
Configuration Information).</t>
<t>Much of the report Information is optional and will depend on the
implementation of the Reporting Task and any parameters defined in the
Task Configuration for the Reporting Task. For example some Reporting
Tasks may choose not to include the Measurement Task Configuration or
scheduled task parameters, while others may do so dependent on the
Controller setting a configurable parameter in the Task
Configuration.</t>
<t>It is possible for a Reporting Task to send just the Report header
(datetime and optional agent ID and/or Group ID) if no measurement
data is available. Whether to send such empty reports again is
dependent on the implementation of the Reporting Task and potential
Task Configuration parameter.</t>
<t>The handling of measurement data on the MA before generating a
Report and transfer from the MA to the Collector is dependent on the
implementation of the device, MA and/or scheduled Tasks and not
defined by the LMAP standards. Such decisions may include limits to
the measurement data storage and what to do when such available
storage becomes depleted.</t>
<t>No context information, such as line speed or broadband product are
included within the report header information as this data is reported
by individual tasks at the time they execute. Either a Measurement
Task can report contextual parameters that are relevant to that
particular measurement, or specific tasks can be used to gather a set
of contextual and environmental data. at certain times independent of
the reporting schedule.</t>
<t>After the report header information the results are reported
grouped according to different Measurement Task Configurations. Each
Task section optionally starts with replicating the Measurement Task
Configuration information before the result headers (titles for data
columns) and the result data rows. The Options reported are those used
for the scheduled execution of the Measurement Task and therefore
include the Options specified in the Task Configuration as well as
additional Options specified in the Scheduled Task. The Scheduled Task
Options are appended to the Task Configuration Options in exactly the
same order as they were provided to the Task during execution.</t>
<t>The result row data includes a time for the start of the
measurement and optionally an end time where the duration also needs
to be considered in the data analysis.</t>
<t>Some Measurement Tasks may optionally include an indication of the
cross-traffic although the meaning a definition of cross-traffic is
left up to each individual Measurement Task. Some Measurement Tasks
may also output other environmental measures in addition to
cross-traffic such as CPU utlilisation or interface speed.</t>
<t>Where the Configuration and Instruction information represent
information transmitted via the Control Protocol, the Report
represents the information that is transmitted via the Report
Protocol. It is constructed at the time of sending a report and
represents the inherent structure of the information that is sent to
the Collector.</t>
<t>Information model elements:</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Main Report object with report header information
object {
datetime ma-report-date;
[uuid ma-report-agent-id;]
[string ma-report-group-id;]
[ma-report-task-obj ma-report-tasks<0..*>];
} ma-report-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Report task header information
object {
string ma-report-task-name;
[uri ma-report-task-registry-entry;]
[name-value-pair ma-report-scheduled-task-options<0..*>];
[string ma-report-task-cycle-id;]
string ma-report-task-column-labels<0..*>;
ma-result-row-obj ma-report-task-rows<0..*>;
} ma-report-task-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Report tasks result rows
object {
datetime ma-report-result-start-time;
[datetime ma-report-result-end-time;]
string ma-report-result-conflicting-tasks<0..*>;
data ma-report-result-values<0..*>;
} ma-result-row-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section title="Common Objects">
<t/>
<section title="Schedules">
<t>A Schedule specifies the execution of a single or repeated series
of Tasks. Each Schedule contains basically two elements: a list of
Tasks to be executed and a timing object for the Schedule. The
Schedule states what Tasks to run (with what configuration) and when
to run the Tasks.</t>
<t>Multiple Tasks in the list of a single Measurement Schedule will
be executed in order with minimal gaps. Tasks in different Schedules
execute in parallel with such conflicts being reported in the
Reporting Information. If two or more Schedules have the same start
time, then the two will execute in parallel. There is no mechanism
to prioritise one schedule over another or to mutex scheduled
tasks.</t>
<t>As well as specifying which Tasks to execute, the Schedule also
specifies how to link the data outputs from each scheduled task to
other scheduled tasks. Specifying this within the Schedule allows
the highest level of flexibility since it is even possible to send
the output from different executions of the same Task Configuration
to different destinations. Since a single Task may have multiple
outputs, the Schedule can independently specify which outputs go to
which destinations. For example, a Measurement Task might report
routine results to a data Reporting Task that communicates hourly
via the Broadband PPP interface, but also outputs emergency
conditions via an alarm Reporting Task communicating immediately
over a GPRS channel. Note that task-to-task data transfer is always
specified in association with the scheduled execution of the sending
task - there is no need for a corresponding input specification for
the receiving task. While it is likely that an MA implementation
will use a queue mechanism between the scheduled tasks, this
Information Model does not mandate or define a queue, or any
potential associated parameters such as storage size and retention
policies.</t>
<t>When specifying the task to execute within the Schedule, it is
possible to add to the task configuration option parameters. This
allows the Task Configuration to determine the common
characteristics of a Task, while selected parameters (e.g. the test
target URL) are defined within the schedule. A single Tasks
Configuration can even be used multiple times in the same schedule
with different additional parameters. This allows for efficiency in
creating and transferring the Instruction. Note that the semantics
of what happens if an option is defined multiple times (either in
the Task Configuration, Schedule or in both) is not standardised and
will depend upon the Task. For example, some tasks may legitimately
take multiple values for a single parameter.</t>
<t>Where Options are specified in both the Schedule and the Task
Configuration, the Schedule Options are appended to those specified
in the Task Configuration.</t>
<t><list style="hanging">
<t hangText="Example:">A Schedule references a single
Measurement Task Configuration for the UDP latency. It specifies
that results are to be sent to a scheduled Reporting Task. This
Reporting Task is executed by a separate Schedule that specifies
that it should run hourly at 5 minutes past the hour. When run
this Reporting Task takes the data generated by the UDP latency
Task as well as any other data to be included in the hourly
report and transfers it to the Collector over the Report Channel
specified within its own Schedule.</t>
</list></t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// main Schedule object with Timing and list of Scheduled Tasks
object {
string ma-schedule-name;
ma-sched-task-obj ma-schedule-tasks<0..*>;
ma-timing-obj ma-schedule-timing;
} ma-schedule-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Scheduled Task object with reference (by name string) to Task
// Configuration and mappings of data outputs to destination tasks
object {
string ma-schedule-task-name;
[name-value-pair ma-schedule-task-options<0..*>];
[ma-sched-downstream-tasks-obj ma-schedule-destination-tasks<0..*>;]
} ma-sched-task-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[// Specification of destination scheduled tasks using reference
// to schedule and task configuration names. Mapping of
// integer denoted data outputs to destination scheduled task
object {
[string ma-schedule-task-destination-schedule-name];
[string ma-schedule-task-destination-task-configuration-name];
[int ma-schedule-task-output-selection<0..*>;] // default: all
} ma-sched-destination-tasks-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t><list style="hanging">
<t hangText="Example:">A measurement task has two defined
inter-task outputs, one for routine measurement results and one
for errors during the task execution. These are defined as
available outputs by the task and are denoted by the integers 1
& 2. In this example, both outputs are sent to the same
reporting task called "Hourly reporting Task" that is executed
from the "Hourly Schedule" schedule. This is done by creating a
ma-sched-destination-tasks-obj with the output selection as
[1,2] and the destination task configuration name as ["Hourly
Reporting Task"] and the destination schedule name as "Hourly
Schedule".</t>
</list></t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[ Measurement Task
Output 1 -----+----> "Hourly Schedule":"Hourly Reporting Task"
Output 2 ----/
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t/>
</section>
<section title="Channels">
<t>A Channel defines a bi-directional communication channel between
the MA and a Controller or Collector. Multiple Channels can be
defined to enable results to be split or duplicated across different
Collectors.</t>
<t>Each Channel contains the details of the remote endpoint
(including location and security credential information such as the
certificate). The timing of when to communicate over a Channel is
specified by the Schedule which executes the corresponding Control
or Reporting Task. The certificate can be the digital certificate
associated to the FQDN in the URL or it can be the certificate of
the Certification Authority that was used to issue the certificate
for the FQDN (Fully Qualified Domain Name) of the target URL (which
will be retrieved later on using a communication protocol such as
TLS). In order to establish a secure channel, the MA will use it's
own security credentials (in the Configuration Information) and the
given credentials for the individual Channel end-point.</t>
<t>As with the Task Configurations, each Channel is also given a
text name by which it can be referenced as a Task Option.</t>
<t>Although the same in terms of information, Channels used for
communication with the Controller are referred to as Control
Channels whereas Channels to Collectors are referred to as Report
Channels. Hence Control Channels will be referenced from Control
Tasks executed by a Control Schedule, whereas Report Channels will
be referenced from within Reporting Tasks executed by an Instruction
Schedule.</t>
<t>Multiple interfaces are also supported. For example the Reporting
Task could be configured to send some results over GPRS. This is
especially useful when such results indicate the loss of
connectivity on a different network interface.</t>
<t><list style="hanging">
<t hangText="Example:">A Channel using for reporting results may
specify that results are to be sent to the URL
(https://collector.foo.org/report/), using the appropriate
digital certificate to establish a secure channel..</t>
</list></t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Channel object with name string allowing reference.
// Contains channel endpoint target URL and security credentials
// to establish secure channel. Optionally allows interface
// specification (by interface name string reference)
object {
string ma-channel-name;
url ma-channel-target;
credentials ma-channel-credentials;
[string ma-channel-interface-name;]
} ma-channel-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section title="Task Configurations ">
<t>Conceptually each Task Configuration defines the parameters of a
Task that the Measurement Agent (MA) may perform at some point in
time. It does not by itself actually instruct the MA to perform them
at any particular time (this is done by a Schedule). Tasks can be
Measurement Tasks (i.e. those Tasks actually performing some type of
passive or active measurement) or any other scheduled activity
performed by the MA such as transferring information to or from the
Controller and Collectors. Other examples of Tasks may include data
manipulation or processing Tasks conducted on the MA.</t>
<t>A Measurement Task Configuration is the same in information terms
to any other Task Configuration. Both measurement and
non-measurement Tasks have a registry entry to enable the MA to
uniquely identify the Task it should execute and retrieve the schema
for any parameters that may be passed to the Task. This registry
entry is specified as a URI and can therefore be used to identify
the Task within a namespace or point to a web or local file location
for the Task information. As mentioned previously this entry may be
used to identify the Measurement Task in a public namespace <xref
target="I-D.ietf-ippm-metric-registry"/> .</t>
<t><list style="hanging">
<t hangText="Example:">A Measurement Task Configuration may
configure a single Measurement Task for measuring UDP latency.
The Measurement Task Configuration could define the destination
port and address for the measurement as well as the duration,
internal packet timing strategy and other parameters (for
example a stream for one hour and sending one packet every 500
ms). It may also define the output type and possible parameters
(for example the output type can be the 95th percentile mean)
where the measurement task accepts such parameters. It does not
define when the task starts (this is defined by the Schedule
element), so it does not by itself instruct the MA to actually
perform this Measurement Task.</t>
</list></t>
<t>The Task Configuration will include a local short name for
reference by a Schedule. Task Configurations will also contain a
registry entry as described above. In addition the Task can be
configured through a set of configuration Options. The nature and
number of these Options will depend upon the Task. These options are
expressed as name-value pairs although the 'value' may be a
structured object instead of a simple string or numeric value. The
implementation of these name-value pairs will vary between data
models such as JSON, XML or TR-069.</t>
<t>A Option that must be present for Reporting Tasks is the Channel
reference specifying how to communicate with a Collector. This is
included in the task options and will have a value that matches a
channel name that has been defined in the Instruction. Similarly
Control Tasks will have a similar option with the value set to a
specified Control Channel.</t>
<t>A reporting task might also have a flag parameter to indicate
whether to report if there is no measurement result data pending to
be transferred to the Collector. In addition many tasks will also
take as a parameter which interface to operate over.</t>
<t>The Task Configuration also contains a suppress-by-default flag
that specifies the behaviour of a default suppress instruction (that
does not list explicit tasks or schedules). If this flag is set to
FALSE then the Task will not be suppressed. It should be noted that
Controller Tasks are not subject to the suppression instruction and
therefore this flag will be ignored in such cases.</t>
<t>In addition the Task Configuration may optionally also be given a
Measurement Cycle ID. The purpose of this ID is to easily identify a
set of measurement results that have been produced by Measurement
Tasks with comparable Options. This ID could be manually incremented
or otherwise changed when an Option change is implemented which
could mean that two sets of results should not be directly
compared.</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Task Configuration object with string name to allow reference
// from Schedule. Contains URI to link to registry or local
// specification of the Task. Options allow the configuration
// of Task parameters (in the form of name-value pairs)
object {
string ma-task-name;
uri ma-task-registry-entry;
[ma-task-option ma-task-options<0..*>];
[boolean ma-task-suppress-by-default;] // default: TRUE
[string ma-task-cycle-id;]
} ma-task-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t>While many of the Task Configuration Options are left to
individual tasks to define, some common Options are used by multiple
tasks and benefit from standardisation. These Options are Channel
and Role.</t>
<t>Channel is used to specify the details of an endpoint for Control
or Reporting Task communications and is detailed elsewhere in this
document.</t>
<t>Role is used to specify which Role the task should be performing
(as defined in the registry) if multiple roles are available.</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// General Task Option
object {
string ma-option-name;
object ma-option-value;
} ma-task-option
// Channel Option
oobject {
string ma-option-name; // set to "channel"
string ma-option-value; // set to ma-channel-name reference
} ma-task-option
// Role Option
object {
string ma-option-name; // set to "role"
string ma-option-value; // set to registry role reference
} ma-task-option
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section title="Timing Information">
<t>The Timing information object used throughout the information
models can take one of five different forms:</t>
<t><list style="numbers">
<t>Periodic. Specifies a start, end and interval time in
milliseconds</t>
<t>Calendar: Specifies a calendar based pattern – e.g. 22
minutes past each hour of the day on weekdays</t>
<t>One Off: A single instance occurring at a specific time</t>
<t>Immediate: Should occur as soon as possible</t>
<t>Startup: Should occur whenever the MA is started (e.g. at
device startup)</t>
</list></t>
<t>Optionally each of the options may also specify a randomness that
should be evaluated and applied separately to each indicated event.
This randomness parameter defines a uniform interval in milliseconds
over which the start of the task is delayed from the starting times
specified by the timing object.</t>
<t>Both the Periodic and Calendar timing objects allow for a series
of tasks to be executed. While both have an optional end time, it is
best practice to always configure an end time and refresh the
information periodically to ensure that lost MAs do not continue
their tasks forever.</t>
<t>Starup timing is only executed on device startup - not when a new
Instruction is transferred to the MA. If scheduled task execution is
desired both on the transfer of the Instruction and on device
restart then both the Immediate and Startup timing needs to be used
in conjunction.</t>
<t>The datetime format used for all elements in the information
model MUST conform to RFC 3339 <xref target="RFC3339"/>.</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Main Timing object with name string to allow reference by Schedule
// Must be specialised by one of the Timing options.
// Includes optional uniform random spread in ms from start time
// given by Timing specialisation
object {
[string ma-timing-name;]
union {
ma-periodic-obj ma-timing-periodic;
ma-calendar-obj ma-timing-calendar;
ma-one-off-obj ma-timing-one-off;
ma-immediate-obj ma-timing-immediate;
ma-startup-obj ma-timing-startup;
}
[int ma-timing-random-spread;] // milliseconds
} ma-timing-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t/>
<section title="Periodic Timing">
<t>Information model elements:</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Timing specialisation to run a series of Tasks repeated at
// set intervals
object {
[datetime ma-periodic start;] // default: immediate
[datetime ma-periodic-end;] // default: indefinite
int ma-periodic-interval; // milliseconds
} ma-periodic-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section title="Calendar Timing">
<t>Calendar Timing supports the routine execution of Measurement
Tasks at specific times and/or on specific dates. It can support
more flexible timing than Periodic Timing since the Measurement
Task execution does not have to be uniformly spaced. For example a
Calendar Timing could support the execution of a Measurement Task
every hour between 6pm and midnight on weekdays only.</t>
<t>Calendar Timing is also required to perform measurements at
meaningful instances in relation to network usage (e.g., at peak
times). If the optional timezone offset is not supplied then local
system time is assumed. This is essential in some use cases to
ensure consistent peak-time measurements as well as supporting MA
devices that may be in an unknown timezone or roam between
different timezones (but know their own timezone information such
as through the mobile network).</t>
<t>Days of week are define using three character strings "Mon",
"Tue", "Wed", "Thu", "Fri", "Sat", "Sun".</t>
<t>If a day of the month is specified that does not exist in the
month (e.g. 29 in Feburary) then those values are ignored.</t>
<t>The calendar elements within the Calendar Timing do not have
defaults in order to avoid accidental high-frequency execution of
Tasks. If all possible values for an element are desired then the
wildcard * is used.</t>
<t>Information model elements:</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Timing specialisation to run repeated Tasks at specific
// times and/or days
object {
[datetime ma-calendar-start;] // default: immediate
[datetime ma-calendar-end;] // default: indefinite
[int ma-calendar-months<0..*>;] // values: 1-12,*
[days ma-calendar-days-of-week<0..*>;]
// values: "Mon", "Tue", "Wed", "Thu", "Fri", "Sat", "Sun",*
[int ma-calendar-days-of-month<0..*>;] // values 1-31,*
[int ma-calendar-hours<0..*>;] // values: 0-23,*
[int ma-calendar-minutes<0..*>;] // values: 0-59,*
[int ma-calendar-seconds<0..*>;] // values: 0-59,*
[int ma-calendar-timezone-offset;]
// default: system timezone offset
} ma-calendar-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section title="One-Off Timing">
<t>Information model elements:</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Timing specialisation to run once at a specified time/date
object {
datetime ma-one-off-time;
} ma-one-off-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t/>
</section>
<section title="Immediate Timing">
<t>The immediate timing object has no further information
elements. The measurement or report is simply to be done as soon
as possible.</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Timing specialisation to run immediately
object {
// empty
} ma-immediate-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t/>
</section>
<section title="Startup Timing">
<t>The immediate timing object has no further information
elements. The measurement or report is simply done at MA
initiation.</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Timing specialisation to run at MA startup
object {
// empty
} ma-startup-obj;
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t/>
</section>
</section>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="IANA" title="IANA Considerations">
<t>This document makes no request of IANA.</t>
<t>Note to RFC Editor: this section may be removed on publication as an
RFC.</t>
<t/>
</section>
<section anchor="Security" title="Security Considerations">
<t>This Information Model deals with information about the control and
reporting of the Measurement Agent. There are broadly two security
considerations for such an Information Model. Firstly the Information
Model has to be sufficient to establish secure communication channels to
the Controller and Collector such that other information can be sent and
received securely. Additionally, any mechanisms that the Network
Operator or other device administrator employs to pre-configure the MA
must also be secure to protect unauthorized parties from modifying
pre-configuration information. These mechanisms are important to ensure
that the MA cannot be hijacked, for example to participate in a DDoS
attack.</t>
<t>The second consideration is that no mandated information items should
pose a risk to confidentiality or privacy given such secure
communication channels. For this latter reason items such as the MA
context and MA ID are left optional and can be excluded from some
deployments. This would, for example, allow the MA to remain anonymous
and for information about location or other context that might be used
to identify or track the MA to be omitted or blurred.</t>
<t>The Information Model should support wherever relevant, all the
security and privacy requirements associated with the LMAP
Framework.</t>
<t/>
</section>
<section anchor="Acknowledgements" title="Acknowledgements">
<t>The notation was inspired by the notation used in the ALTO protocol
specification.</t>
<t>Philip Eardley, Trevor Burbridge, Marcelo Bagnulo and Juergen
Schoenwaelder work in part on the Leone research project, which receives
funding from the European Union Seventh Framework Programme
[FP7/2007-2013] under grant agreement number 317647.</t>
</section>
</middle>
<back>
<references title="Normative References">
&rfc2119;
&rfc3339;
&I-D.ietf-lmap-framework;
</references>
<references title="Informative References">
&rfc3444;
&I-D.bagnulo-ippm-new-registry;
&I-D.schoenw-lmap-yang;
</references>
<section title="JSON Data Model Example">
<t>In order to give an example of data in the Information Model we need
to select a data model language. In the following example we have
expressed the Data Model using JSON as this will be of direct interest
to some Control and Report Protocols. A YANG data model implementation
of the Information Model is provided in a separate draft <xref
target="I-D.schoenw-lmap-yang"/>.</t>
<t>The example is broken down into a number of different steps that
might adhere to the steps within a Control and Report Protocol:</t>
<t><list style="numbers">
<t>Pre-configuration.</t>
<t>Configuration</t>
<t>Capabilities</t>
<t>Instruction</t>
<t>Report</t>
<t>Suppression</t>
</list></t>
<t/>
<t>While the pre-configuration is not delivered as part of the Control
Protocol, the same JSON data model is used for consistency and to aid
the reader.</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
//Pre-configuration
{
"ma-config": {
"ma-agent-id": "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000",
"ma-control-tasks": [
{
"ma-task-name": "Controller configuration",
"ma-task-registry-entry":
"urn:ietf:lmap:control:http_controller_configuration",
"ma-task-options": [{"name": "channel",
"value": "Controller channel"}]
}
],
"ma-control-channels": [
{
"ma-channel-name": "Controller channel",
"ma-channel-target": "http://www.example.com/lmap/controller",
"ma-channel-credientials": { }
}
],
"ma-control-schedules": [
{
"ma-schedule-name": "pre-configured schedule",
"ma-schedule-tasks": {
"ma-schedule-task-name": "Controller configuration",
},
"ma-schedule-timing": {
"ma-timing-name": "startup plus up to one hour",
"ma-timing-startup": {
},
"ma-timing-random-spread": "3600000"
}
}
],
"ma-credentials": { }
}
}
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t/>
<t>Given the pre-configuration information the MA is able to contact the
Controller and receive an updated/expanded Configuration. In this
example additional Control Protocol tasks to post Status and
Capabilities to the Controller and fetch the Instruction are added as
well as moving the schedule timing for contacting the Controller to
hourly.</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Configuration
{
"ma-config": {
"ma-agent-id": "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000",
"ma-control-tasks": [
{
"ma-task-name": "Controller configuration",
"ma-task-registry-entry":
"urn:ietf:lmap:control:http_controller_configuration",
"ma-task-options": [{"name": "channel",
"value": "Controller channel"}]
},
{
"ma-task-name": "Controller status and capabilities",
"ma-task-registry-entry":
"urn:ietf:lmap:control:http_control_status_and_capabilities",
"ma-task-options": [{"name": "channel",
"value": "Controller channel"}]
},
{
"ma-task-name": "Controller instruction",
"ma-task-registry-entry":
"urn:ietf:lmap:control:http_controller_instruction",
"ma-task-options": [{"name": "channel",
"value": "Controller channel"}]
}
],
"ma-control-channels": [
{
"ma-channel-name": "Controller channel",
"ma-channel-target": "http://www.example.com/lmap/controller",
"ma-channel-credientials": { }
}
],
"ma-control-schedules": [
{
"ma-schedule-name": "Controller schedule",
"ma-schedule-tasks": [
{
"ma-schedule-task-name": "Controller configuration",
},
{
"ma-schedule-task-name":
"Controller status and capabilities",
},
{
"ma-schedule-task-name": "Controller instruction",
}
],
"ma-schedule-timing": {
"ma-timing-name": "hourly randomly",
"ma-timing-calendar": {
"ma-calendar-minutes": ["00"],
"ma-calendar-seconds": ["00"]
},
"ma-timing-random-spread": "3600000"
}
}
],
"ma-credentials": { }
}
}
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t/>
<t>The above configuration now contacts the Controller randomnly within
each hour. The following is an example of the Status and Capabilities
information that is transferred from the MA to the Controller.</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Status and Capabilities
{
"ma-status-and-capabilities": {
"ma-agent-id": "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000",
"ma-device-id": "urn:dev:mac:0024befffe804ff1",
"ma-hardware": "mfr-home-gateway-v10",
"ma-firmware": "25637748-rev2a",
"ma-version": "ispa-v1.01",
"ma-interfaces": [
{
"ma-interface-name": "broadband",
"ma-interface-type": "PPPoE"
}
],
"ma-last-task": "",
"ma-last-report": "",
"ma-last-instruction": "",
"ma-last-configuration": "2014-06-08T22:47:31+00:00",
"ma-supported-tasks": [
{
"ma-task-name": "Controller configuration",
"ma-task-registry":
"urn:ietf:lmap:control:http_controller_configuration"
},,
{
"ma-task-name": "Controller status and capabilities",
"ma-task-registry":
"urn:ietf:lmap:control:http_control_status_and_capabilities"
},
{
"ma-task-name": "Controller instruction",
"ma-task-registry":
"urn:ietf:lmap:control:http_controller_instruction"
},
{
"ma-task-name": "Report",
"ma-task-registry": "urn:ietf:lmap:report:http_report"
},
{
"ma-task-name": "UDP Latency",
"ma-task-registry":
"urn:ietf:ippm:measurement:UDPLatency-Poisson-XthPercMean"
}
]
}
}
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t/>
<t>After fetching the status and capabilties the Controller issues and
Instruction to the MA to perform a single UDP latency measurement task 4
times a day and to report the results immediately.</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Instruction
{
"ma-instruction": {
"ma-instruction-tasks": [
{
"ma-task-name": "UDP Latency",
"ma-task-registry-entry":
"urn:ietf:ippm:measurement:UDPLatency-Poisson-XthPercMean",
"ma-task-options": [
{"name": "X", "value": "99"},
{"name":"rate", "value": "5"},
{"name":"duration", "value": "30.000"},
{"name":"interface", "value": "broadband"},
{"name":"destination-ip",
"value": {"version":"ipv4", "ip-address":"192.168.2.54"}},
{"name":"destination-port", "value": "50000"},
{"name":"source-port", "value": "50000"}
],
"ma-task-suppress-by-default": "TRUE"
},
{
"ma-task-name": "Report",
"ma-task-registry-entry": "urn:ietf:lmap:report:http_report",
"ma-task-options": [
{"name": "report-with-no-data", "value": "FALSE"},
{"name": "channel", "value": "Collector A"]}
],
"ma-task-suppress-by-default": "FALSE"
}
],
"ma-report-channels": [
{
"ma-channel-name": "Collector A",
"ma-channel-target": "http://www.example2.com/lmap/collector",
"ma-channel-credientials": { }
}
],
"ma-instruction-schedules": [
{
"ma-schedule-name": "4 times daily test UDP latency and report",
"ma-schedule-tasks": [
{
"ma-schedule-task-name": "UDP Latency",
"ma-schedule-destination-tasks": [
{
"ma-schedule-task-output-selection": [1],
"ma-schedule-task-destination-schedule-name":
"4 times daily test UDP latency and report",
"ma-schedule-task-destination-task-configuration-names":
"Report"
}
]
},
{
"ma-schedule-task-name": "Report",
}
],
"ma-schedule-timing": {
"ma-timing-name": "once every 6 hours",
"ma-timing-calendar": {
"ma-calendar-hours": ["00", "06", "12", "18"],
"ma-calendar-minutes": ["00"],
"ma-calendar-seconds": ["00"]
},
"ma-timing-random-spread": "21600000"
}
}
]
}
}
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t/>
<t>The report task in the Instruction is executed immediately after the
UDP test and transfers the following data to the Collector.</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Report
{
"ma-report": {
"ma-report-date": "2014-06-09T02:30:45+00:00",
"ma-report-agent-id": "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000",
"ma-report-tasks": [
{
"ma-report-task-name": "UDP Latency",
"ma-report-task-registry-entry":
"urn:ietf:ippm:measurement:UDPLatency-Poisson-XthPercMean",
"ma-report-scheduled-task-options": [
{"name": "X", "value": "99"},
{"name":"rate", "value": "5"},
{"name":"duration", "value": "30.000"},
{"name":"interface", "value": "broadband"},
{"name":"destination-ip",
"value": {"version":"ipv4", "ip-address":"192.168.2.54"}},
{"name":"destination-port", "value": "50000"},
{"name":"source-port", "value": "50000"}
],
"ma-report-task-column-labels":
["start-time", "conflicting-tasks", "cross-traffic",
"mean", "min", "max"],
"ma-report-task-rows":
["2014-06-09T02:30:10+00:00", "", "0",
"20.13", "18.3", "24.1"]
}
]
}
}
]]></artwork>
</figure>
<t/>
<t>The Controller decides that there is a problem with the UDP L:atency
test and issues a Suppression Instruction. Since the task is marked as
suppressible by default, simply turning on suppression will stop the
task being executed in future.</t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
// Suppression
{
"ma-instruction": {
"ma-suppression": {
"ma-suppression-enabled": "TRUE"
}
}
}
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</section>
</back>
</rfc>
| PAFTECH AB 2003-2026 | 2026-04-24 02:38:39 |