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rfc:rfc2321

Network Working Group A. Bressen Request for Comments: 2321 Cohesive Network Systems Category: Informational 1 April 1998

      RITA -- The Reliable Internetwork Troubleshooting Agent

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 (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

 A Description of the usage of Nondeterministic Troubleshooting and
 Diagnostic Methodologies as applied to today's complex
 nondeterministic networks and environments.

1. Introduction

 Increasingly, IETF efforts have been devoted to aiding network
 management, troubleshooting, and diagnosis. Results have included
 SNMP, cflowd, and RMON, and ongoing projects at the time of this
 writing include Universal Logging Protocol and Distributed
 Management.  These tools work well within the horizon of
 deterministic situations in which the configuration of the network or
 relevant components is known or can be relatively easily determined.
 They do not well address many problems that are related to the
 complex internetworks we have today, such as:
   o  Networks where the root bridge for a world-wide bridged
      network is suboptimally located, such as under the desk of a
      secretary who kicks off her shoes when she arrives in the
      morning.
   o  Networks where a hub is located adjacent to a monitor that
      emits disruptive RF when displaying certain graphics.
   o  Networks where an ISP and several of their customers use
      network 10.0.0.0 internally and do not hide RIP broadcasts from
      one another.
   o  Networks where gateways are data-sensitive
   o  Networks where vendors inadvertently ship units with
      duplicate MAC addresses to the same end-user or where all users
      have a tool for changing MAC addresses.

Bressen Informational [Page 1] RFC 2321 RITA 1 April 1998

 In this document we introduce a new hardware-based tool for diagnosis
 and repair of network related hardware and software problems. This
 tool is best suited to addressing nondeterministic problems such as
 those described above. This tool has broad areas of application at
 all levels of the OSI model; in addition to uses in the physical,
 network, transport and application layers, it has been used to
 successfully address problems at the political and religious layers
 as well. RITA, the Reliable Internet Troubleshooting Agent, was
 developed initially at The Leftbank Operation (now known as Cohesive
 Network Systems, New England Division) based on a hardware platform
 supplied by Archie McPhee (Reference [1]). A typical RITA unit is
 depicted in Figure 1.
       comb      neck             body                    feet
        |         |                |                       |
        v         v                V                       V
         ,^/'/,           ,______________________.         ,
       i'  '  /          /                       =========<-
      / <o>   `---------/                        \         `
    .;__.  ,__,--------.                         /         ,
       / ,/ vv          \                        =========<-
      '-'                `-----------------------'         `
       ^     ^                                     ^
       |     |                                     |
      beak  wattles                               legs
                               Figure 1.

2. Specification

 A typical RITA is 51.25 cm long and yellow-orange in color.  Either
 natural or artificial substances may be used for construction.  RITA
 has very flexible characteristics, and thus can interoperate within
 fairly broad parameters.  Unlike most other tools described in
 forthcoming RFC's, RITA does not require any IANA namespace
 management.  It is not anticipated that versions will be
 incompatible, thus no versioning field is present. Interoperability
 testing may be conducted at a future meeting of the IETF.

3. Diagnostic Usage:

 RITA may be applied in two diagnostic fashions, however only one of
 these methods, described below in 3.1, has been refined to a state
 such that we feel comfortable publishing the methodology.

Bressen Informational [Page 2] RFC 2321 RITA 1 April 1998

 3.1   The first method provides a broad-spectrum evaluation of
 quality of the entity tested, and is thus known as the BS eval test.
 This method can be used with great success on both deterministic and
 non-deterministic problems.  Testing is performed by placing the RITA
 unit on top of a suspect piece of hardware, or, in the case of
 software, placing the unit on a packaged copy of the program, or hard
 copy of the source code.
 If the RITA does not get up and fly away, the hardware or software
 being tested is misconfigured, fubar, or broken as designed. While
 this method does identify all equipment and software as sub-optimal,
 Sturgeon's Law (see reference [5]) indicates that at least 90% of
 these results are accurate, and it is felt that a maximum 10% false
 positive result is within acceptable parameters.
 3.2 The second method involves applications of traditional techniques
 of haruspication (see reference [3]) and to date has been practiced
 with much greater success using implements other than RITA. The
 absence of entrails in the RITA unit may contribute to this; future
 design enhancements may address this issue by the addition of
 artificial giblets.
 An alternative approach that has been discarded involved cleromantic
 principles (see reference [3]), and was known as "flipping the bird".

4. Corrective Usage:

 Corrective usage of RITA is most successful in dealing with the most
 difficult class of networking problems: those that seem to exhibit
 sporadic, non-deterministic behavior.
 RITA units enhance normal corrective measures of these problems,
 methods such as rebooting, reseating of components and connectors,
 changing tabs to spaces or vice-versa in configuration files, blaming
 third-party vendors, and use of ballistic implements to effect
 wholesale displacement of systems and software, to at least 100% of
 their normal efficacy.
  Specific Problem Methodologies:
   o  Physical Layer: Wave RITA unit towards malfunctioning
      components.
   o  Network Layer: Wave RITA unit towards malfunctioning
      components.
   o  Transport Layer: Wave RITA unit towards malfunctioning
      components.

Bressen Informational [Page 3] RFC 2321 RITA 1 April 1998

   o  Application Layer: Strike product vendor representative
      (or programmer, if available) with RITA, preferably on the top
      of the skull, while shouting, "Read The Fine RFC's comma darn
      it!"
   o  Political Layer: Strike advocates of disruptive or
      obstructive policies with RITA, preferably on the top of the
      skull. In extreme cases insertion of RITA into bodily apertures
      may become necessary. WARNING: subsequent failure to remove RITA
      may cause further problems.
   o  Religious Layer: Strike advocates of disruptive or
      obstructive religions, and their vendor representatives, with
      RITA, preferably on the top of the skull. In extreme cases, the
      RITA may be used as a phlactory, funerary urn, or endcap for
      bus-and-tag cables.

5. Further Work

 A RITA MIB is under development.  This may require adding interface
 technology and hardware to RITA; a prototype is depicted in Figure 2.
       comb      neck             body                    feet
        |         |                |                       |
        v         v                V                       V
         ,^/'/,           ,______________________.         ,
       i'  '  /          /                       =========<-
      / <o>   `---------/                        \_____________m
    .;__.  ,__,--------.                         /         ,
       / ,/ vv          \                        =========<-
      '-'                `-----------------------'         `
       ^     ^                                     ^          ^
       |     |                                     |          |
      beak  wattles                               legs       ethernet
                               Figure 2.
 There has been to date no investigation of the possible use of RITA
 to implement RFC 1149.
 Additionally, this tool has been used with some success for dealing
 with non-network problems, particularly in the debugging of SCSI bus
 malfunctions.

Bressen Informational [Page 4] RFC 2321 RITA 1 April 1998

6. Security Considerations

 The RITA will only have serious impact on system security facilities
 if it is filled with lead shot. It does however, increase the
 personal security of system administrators; few network toughs are
 willing to face down a sysadmin armed with a RITA and a confident
 demeanor.

7. Citations and References

 [1] Postel, J., and J. Reynolds, "Instructions to RFC Authors", RFC
 2223, October 1997.
 [2] McPhee, A., http://www.mcphee.com
 [3] http://www.clix.net/5thworld/no-osphere/3e/manteia.html
 [4] Waitzman, D., "Transmission of IP Datagrams on Avian Carriers"
 RFC 1149, April 1990.
 [5] Raymond, E. (editor), "The New Hacker's Dictionary" 2nd ed., MIT
 Press, September 1993.  ISBN 0-262-18154-1

8. Acknowledgments

 Initial Development of RITA, Editing, and excellent leather jacket
 provided by Bob Antia, first reading by John "cgull" Hood,
 illustrations done using equipment provided by Elizabeth Goodman and
 Gerry Goodnough.

9. Author's Address

 Andrew K. Bressen
 72 Endicott Street
 Somerville, MA
 Phone: 617-776-2373
 EMail: bressen@leftbank.com, bressen@cohesive.com, bressen@mirror.to

Bressen Informational [Page 5] RFC 2321 RITA 1 April 1998

10. Full Copyright Statement

 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.
 This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
 others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
 or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
 and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
 kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
 included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
 document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
 the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
 Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
 developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
 copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
 followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
 English.
 The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
 revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
 This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
 "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
 TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
 BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
 HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
 MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Bressen Informational [Page 6]

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