RFC 2753 (rfc2753) - Page 3 of 20


A Framework for Policy-based Admission Control



Alternative Format: Original Text Document



RFC 2753      Framework for Policy-based Admission Control  January 2000


   -  Policy: The combination of rules and services where rules define
      the criteria for resource access and usage.

   -  Policy control: The application of rules to determine whether or
      not access to a particular resource should be granted.

   -  Policy Object:  Contains policy-related information such as policy
      elements and is carried in a request or response related to a
      resource allocation decision.

   -  Policy Element: Subdivision of policy objects; contains single
      units of information necessary for the evaluation of policy rules.
      A single policy element may carry an user or application
      identification whereas another policy element may carry user
      credentials or credit card information.  The policy elements
      themselves are expected to be independent of which QoS signaling
      protocol is used.

   -  Policy Decision Point (PDP): The point where policy decisions are
      made.

   -  Policy Enforcement Point (PEP): The point where the policy
      decisions are actually enforced.

   -  Policy Ignorant Node (PIN): A network element that does not
      explicitly support policy control using the mechanisms defined in
      this document.

   -  Resource: Something of value in a network infrastructure to which
      rules or policy criteria are first applied before access is
      granted. Examples of resources include the buffers in a router and
      bandwidth on an interface.

   -  Service Provider: Controls the network infrastructure  and may be
      responsible for the charging and accounting of services.

   -  Soft State Model - Soft state is a form of the stateful model that
      times out installed state at a PEP or PDP. It is an automatic way
      to erase state in the presence of communication or network element
      failures. For example, RSVP uses the soft state model for
      installing reservation state at network elements along the path of
      a data flow.

   -  Installed State: A new and unique request made from a PEP to a PDP
      that must be explicitly deleted.






Yavatkar, et al.             Informational