RFC 3139 (rfc3139) - Page 2 of 11
Requirements for Configuration Management of IP-based Networks
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 3139 Requirements for Configuration Management June 2001
1.0 Introduction
1.1 Motivation, Scope and Goals of this document
A number of IETF working groups have introduced new technologies
which offer integrated and differentiated services. To support these
new technologies, working group members found that they had new
requirements for configuration of these technologies. One of these
new requirements was for the provisioning (configuration) of behavior
at the network level.
An example of this type of configuration would be instructing all
routers in a network to provide 'gold' service to a particular set of
customers. Depending on the specific network equipment and
definition of 'gold' service, this configuration request might
translate to different configuration parameters on different vendors
equipment and many individual configuration commands at the router.
This higher level of configuration management has come to commonly be
known as policy based management.
Working groups associated with these new technologies believed that
the existing SNMP based management framework, while adequate for
fault, configuration management at the individual instance (e.g.,
interface) level, performance and other management functions commonly
associated with it, was not able to meet these new needs. As a
result they began working on new solutions and approaches.
COPS [COPS] for RSVP [RSVP] provides routers with the opportunity to
ask their Policy Server for an admit/reject decision for a particular
RSVP session. This model allows routers to outsource their resource
allocation decisions to some other entity. However, this model does
not work with DiffServ [DSARCH] where there is no signalling
protocol. Therefore, the policies that affect resource allocation
decisions must be provisioned to the routers. It became evident that
there was a need for coordinating both RSVP-based and DiffServ-based
policies to provide end2end QoS. Working groups began to extend and
leverage approaches such as COPS for RSVP to support Diffserv
policies. This gave birth to COPS-PR [COPS-PR].
These extensions caused concern that the IETF was about to develop a
set of fragmented solutions which were locally optimized for specific
technologies and not well integrated in the existing Internet
Management Framework. The concern prompted some of the Area
Directors associated with the Operations and Management, Transport
and General areas, and some IAB members to organize a two day meeting
in mid September 1999. The primary purpose of the meeting was to
examine the requirements for configuration management and evaluate
the COPS/PIB and SNMP/MIB approaches in light of these requirements.
Sanchez, et al. Informational