InternetDraftEngineering Task Force (IETF) A. MurdockIntended status: InformationalRequest for Comments: 7467 NATO C&I AgencyExpires: July 5, 2015 January 5,Category: Informational April 2015 ISSN: 2070-1721 URN Namespace for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)draft-murdock-nato-nid-03.txtAbstract This document allocates a formal Uniform Resource Name (URN) namespace for assignment by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), as specified in RFC 3406. At this time, the URN will be used primarily to uniquely identify Extensible Markup Language (XML) artefacts that provide information about NATO message text formats and service specifications as described in various NATO standards, instructions, and publications. Status ofthisThis Memo ThisInternet-Draftdocument issubmitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79. Internet-Drafts are working documentsnot an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for informational purposes. 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Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document.Abstract ThisCode Components extracted from this documentallocates a formal Uniform Resource Name (URN) namespace for assignment by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO),must include Simplified BSD License text asspecifieddescribed inRFC 3406. The current primary use is for uniquely identifying Extensible Markup Language (XML) artifacts that provide information about NATO message text formatsSection 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions andservice specificationsare provided without warranty as described invarious NATO standards, instructions and publications.the Simplified BSD License. Table of Contents 1. Introduction ................................................ 2 2. Specification Template ...................................... 3 2.1. Namespace ID ........................................... 3 2.2. Registration Information ............................... 3 2.3. Declared Registrant of the Namespace ................... 3 2.4. Declaration of Syntactic Structure ..................... 3 2.5. Relevant Ancillary Documentation ....................... 4 2.6. Identifier Uniqueness Considerations ...................54 2.7. Identifier Persistence Considerations ..................54 2.8. Process of Identifier Assignment ....................... 5 2.9. Process for Identifier Resolution ...................... 5 2.10. Rules for Lexical Equivalence ......................... 5 2.11. Conformance with URN Syntax ...........................65 2.12. Validation Mechanism ..................................65 2.13. Scope .................................................65 3. Namespace Considerations .................................... 6 4. Community Considerations .................................... 6 5. Security Considerations ..................................... 7 6. IANA Considerations ......................................... 7 7. Conclusions ................................................. 7 8. References .................................................. 7 8.1. Normative References ................................... 7 8.2. Informative References ................................. 89.Acknowledgments............................................................................................. 8 Author's Address ............................................... 8 1. Introduction Historically, NATO has used standardized character-oriented message text formats (MTF) to interoperate,reportreport, and exchange information both among its commands and with national entities, commercialpartnerspartners, and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs). These MTFs are generated using the NATO Message Text Formatting System (FORMETS) in accordance with the rules,constructionsconstructions, and vocabulary specified within the Allied Data Publication Number 3 (ADatP-3). Almost 400 NATO-defined messages that conform to ADatP-3 are contained in the Allied Procedural Publication Number 11 (APP-11)message catalogue [6].NATO Message Catalogue [7]. Prior to20082008, these messages were only available asslash delimitedslash-delimited textual messages. Since 2008, the APP-11 message catalogue also includes XML-MTF definitions for these messages, giving rise to a need to define and manage a URN namespace to name the XML namespaces. To address this need,a request forthis document requests that a formal URN space typeis being madebe assigned as described in Section 4.3 of RFC 3406. 2. Specification Template 2.1. Namespace ID The Namespace ID (NID) "nato"is requested.has been assigned by IANA. 2.2. Registration Information Version 1 Date: 2014-09-11 2.3. Declared Registrant of the Namespace Registering Organization: Name: North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Communications & InformationServicesAgency (NCIA) Address: SHAPE, 7010, Belgium Declared Contact:Role:NATO Naming and Addressing Registration Authority (NRA) Email: nra@ncia.nato.int 2.4. Declaration of Syntactic Structure The Namespace Specific String (NSS) of all URNs that use the "nato" NID shall have the following structure: <URN> ::= "urn:" "nato" ":" <NSS> <NSS> ::= <Type> | <Type> ":" <Source> | <Type> ":" <Source> 1*( ":" <segment> ) <Type> ::= 1*<non-colon chars> <Source> ::= 1*<non-colon chars> <segment> ::= 1*<non-colon chars> <non-colon chars> ::= <non-colon trans> | "%" <hex> <hex> <non-colon trans> ::= <upper> | <lower> | <number> | <non-colon other> <hex> ::= <number> | "A" | "B" | "C" | "D" | "E" | "F" | "a" | "b" | "c" | "d" | "e" | "f" <non-colon other> ::= "(" | ")" | "+" | "," | "-" | "." | "=" | "@" | ";" | "$" |"_" | "!" | "*" | "'" The "Type" is the top-level segment of the NSS. It is a requiredUS- ASCIIUS-ASCII string, subject to the above syntax, that conforms to the URN syntax requirements (see RFC 2141 [1]). It identifies a particular category or type of named resources, such as "mtf". The "Source" is the second-level segment of the NSS, belonging to the "Type" context. At this time, not all "Type" segments have "Source" children, making "Source" an optional US-ASCII string, subject to the above syntax and conformant to the URN syntax requirements (see RFC 2141 [1]). "Source" identifies a particular standard,cataloguecatalogue, or othersource ofrelevant specifications. The NATO Naming and Registration Authority (NRA) functions as a Local Internet Registry under RIPE NCC and will also serve as the responsible registrar for assigning the first two levels of segments within the NSS ("Type" and "Source"). The NRA may directly assign segments below these levels of the namespace hierarchy, or delegate assignment responsibilities for segments below the second level(i.e.(i.e., below "Source") at its discretion. In either case, the NRA will ensure that a registry of the resulting namespace is maintained. 2.5. Relevant Ancillary DocumentationAdatP-3ADatP-3 -The message text format standard promulgated underNATO, "Concept of NATO Message Text Formatting System (Conformets) - ADatP-3 (A)", STANAG 5500ed. 7 The interim NATO Metadata Registry and Repository (NMRR) webpage can be found at https://nmrr.ncia.nato.int/home.htm- Edition 7, November 2010. 2.6. Identifier Uniqueness Considerations The NRA, as registrar, shall directlyassureensure the global uniqueness of the assigned strings. Though responsibility for administration of sub-trees may be delegated, these shall not be published to the registry or be requested to be resolved by any URN resolver until the uniqueness of the resulting urn:nato URN has been validated against the existing contents of the registry. URN identifiers shall be assigned toat mostone resource at most and not reassigned. 2.7. Identifier Persistence Considerations The Registrar may assign URNs in sub-trees below the level of Type orStandard, butStandard; however, once registered, URNs shall not bere-assigned.reassigned. Within the registry, their status asactive"active" orarchive"archive" shall be recorded. 2.8. Process of Identifier Assignment Anamespace specificnamespace-specific string within the NATO namespace will only be assigned upon advancement of a relevant specification. The Registrarcheckswill check all requested identifiers against the existing registrations within urn:nato to ensure uniqueness and encourage relevance. The assignment may include delegated registration activities for the sub-tree if underpinned by supporting agreements. Otherwise, such responsibilities remain with the NRA as the overarching Registrar. In any case, theurnURN must be registered with appropriate metadata before an authorized request for URN resolution can be initiated (if necessary). 2.9. Process for Identifier Resolution The namespace is not currently listed with a Resolution Discovery System (RDS) [3]. In the future, URNs from this namespace may be resolved using a NATO listing in an RDS, using athird party listedthird-party-listed resolver,usingan unlisted private resolver, or some combination of these. The resolution method for each segment will be registered with the NRA Registrar. 2.10. Rules for Lexical Equivalence No special considerations. The rules for lexical equivalence specified in RFC 2141 apply. 2.11. Conformance with URN Syntax No special considerations. 2.12. Validation Mechanism None specified. It will be conducted as part of the application for identifier registration as indicated in preceding paragraphs. 2.13. Scope Global. 3. Namespace Considerations In addition to the large number of XML message specifications that now exist in APP-11, there are other existing and emerging NATO standard messages expressed as XML, as well as ongoing Web service specification development. With no single NID registered to NATO, some of these specifications may be established within locally relevant, self-generated URN namespaces. Not only does this inhibit the portability and adoption intended by standards development[4],[5], it risks name collisions when exposed to the global context of the federation of partners for which these messages are destined. The use of Uniform Resource Names with an appropriate Namespace ID will enable the various NATO standards committees and working groups[5][6] to use unique, relevant, reliable, permanent,managedmanaged, and accessible namespace names for their XML products. A dedicated namespace also provides NATO the opportunity to leverage the use of URNs for persistent naming of non-XML resources. 4. Community Considerations The NATO standards development community, and those implementing such standards, will benefit from publication of this namespace by having more permanent and reliable names for the XML namespaces defined within STANAGs, the MTF catalogue(APP-11)(APP-11), and other published standards[4].[5]. Though these are NATO-published standards[4],[5], they represent the consensus of multi-national working groups, are implemented in commercialproductsproducts, and are used by partners within the international community. In the case of MTF standards[5],[7], the responsibility for its development and maintenance belongs to the NATO C3 Board's Message Text Formats (MFT) Capability Team[5].[6]. This team is "open to all recognized NATO Partners around the Globe in principle. The term 'Partners around the Globe' summarizes all partners that are listed on the NATO webpage: Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council (EAPC), NATO's Mediterranean Dialogue (MD), Istanbul Cooperation Initiative (ICI) and Partners across the globe"[AC/322-N(2014)0091-AS1].[8]. 5. Security ConsiderationsThis document introducesSince the URNs in this namespace are opaque, there are no additional security considerationsbeyondother than those normally associated with the use and resolution of URIs and URNs ingeneral.general (see the Security Considerations in Internet STD 66 [4], RFC 2141 [1], and BCP 66 [2]). It is noted, however, that resolution algorithms and rules for handling invalid URNs are opaque. Therefore, attempting to resolve a NATO URN through a resolver other than one operated or delegated by NATO may return outdated, incorrect, or confusing results. Distribution of NATO information in any form is subject to its security policies. Nonetheless, this specification is for public use and not subject to any NATO security policies. 6. IANA Considerations This documentdefines aregisters the formal URN NIDregistration of"nato", whichis requested to behas been entered into the "Formal URN Namespaces" IANA registry[Uniform Resource Names (URN) Namespaces].[9]. Per Section 4.3 of RFC 3406[2] Sec. 4.3,[2], formal NIDs are assigned via IETF Consensus and are subject to IESG review and acceptance. The registration template is given insectionSection 2. 7. Conclusions It is necessary that NATO ensures its messages, servicespecificationsspecifications, and other XMLartifactsartefacts are based in namespaces that can be described using unique,persistentpersistent, and managed URNs. Considering its role as an information broker between many disparate communities, this documentrecommendsregisters a formal namespace identifier (NID)urn:nato"nato" for Uniform Resource Names (URN) associated with NATO information products andvocabularies.vocabularies: urn:nato. 8. References 8.1. Normative References [1] Moats, R., "URN Syntax", RFC 2141, May1997.1997, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2141>. [2] Daigle, L., van Gulik, D., Iannella,R.R., and P. Faltstrom, "Uniform ResourceNameNames (URN) Namespace Definition Mechanisms", BCP 66, RFC 3406, October2002.2002, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3406>. [3] Sollins, K., "Architectural Principles of Uniform Resource Name Resolution", RFC 2276, January1998.1998, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2276>. [4] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66, RFC 3986, January 2005, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3986>. 8.2. Informative References[4] List[5] NATO, "List of Current NATOStandards (publicly available hosted by NATO Standardization Office): http://nso.nato.int/nso/nsdd/listpromulg.html [5] The Message Text Format Capability Team website: https://nhqc3s.hq.nato.int/Default.aspxStandards", <http://nso.nato.int/nso/nsdd/listpromulg.html>. [6]APP-11NATO, "NATO HQ C3 Staff Main Page", <https://nhqc3s.hq.nato.int/Default.aspx>. [7] NATO, "NATO Message Catalogue -the ADatP-3 message catalogue promulgated under NATO Standardization Agreement (STANAG) 7149 ed.5 [AC/322-N(2014)0091-AS1] NATO notice which specifies that partners that have, or intendAPP-11(C) Change 1" STANAG 7149, Edition 5, September 2010. [8] NATO, "Request tointroduce, systems interoperable withopen MTF CaT to all NATOMTFs may joinPartners", document AC/322-N(2014)0091-AS1, 2014. Available from therespectiveNATOworking group, subject to the approval of the C3 Board. [UniformPublic Diplomacy Division. [9] IANA, "Uniform Resource Names (URN)Namespaces] This is the the Official IANA Registry of URN Namespaces located at: http://www.iana.org/assignments/urn-namespaces/urn-namespaces.xhtml 9.Namespaces", <http://www.iana.org/assignments/urn-namespaces>. Acknowledgments The author acknowledges and appreciates the support and expertise provided by Nanda Kol, UlrichRitgenRitgen, and the urn-nid review team.This document was prepared using 2-Word-v2.0.template.dot.Authors' Address Aidan Murdock NATO C&I Agency Core Enterprise Services Naming and Registration Authority SHAPE, Belgium 7010Email:EMail: Aidan.murdock@ncia.nato.int