RFC 3052 (rfc3052) - Page 1 of 12
Service Management Architectures Issues and Review
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
Network Working Group M. Eder
Request for Comments: 3052 Nokia
Category: Informational S. Nag
January 2001
Service Management Architectures Issues and Review
Status of this Memo
This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this
memo is unlimited.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.
Abstract
Many of the support functions necessary to exploit the mechanisms by
which differing levels of service can be provided are limited in
scope and a complete framework is non-existent. Various efforts at
such a framework have received a great deal of attention and
represent a historical shift in scope for many of the organizations
looking to address this problem. The purpose of this document is to
explore the problems of defining a Service management framework and
to examine some of the issues that still need to be resolved.
1. Introduction
Efforts to provide mechanisms to distinguish the priority given to
one set of packets, or flows, relative to another are well underway
and in many modern IP networks, best effort service will be just one
of the many services being offered by the network as opposed to it
being the only service provided. Unfortunately, many of the support
functions necessary to exploit the mechanisms by which network level
service can be provided are limited in scope and a complete framework
is non-existent. Compounding the problem is the varied understanding
of exactly what the scope of "service" is in an IP network. IP, in
contrast to connection oriented network technologies, will not be
able to limit the definition of service management simply to end to
end connectivity, but will combine service management with regards to
transport with the service requirements of the actual applications
and how they are using the network. The phenomenal growth in data
networks as well as the growth in application bandwidth usage has had
the consequence that the existing methods of management are not
sufficient to handle the growing demands of scale and complexity.
Eder & Nag Informational