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rfc:rfc1431

Network Working Group P. Barker Request for Comments: 1431 University College London

                                                         February 1993
                            DUA Metrics

Status of this Memo

 This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
 not specify an Internet standard.  Distribution of this memo is
 unlimited.

Abstract

 This RFC is being distributed to members of the Internet community in
 order to solicit their reactions to the proposals contained in it.
 While the issues discussed may not be directly relevant to the
 research problems of the Internet, they may be interesting to a
 number of researchers and implementers.
 This document defines a set of criteria by which a DUA
 implementation, or more precisely a Directory user interface, may be
 judged.  Particular issues covered include terminal requirements;
 style of interface; target user; default object classes and attribute
 types; use of DAP; error handling.  The focus of the note is on
 "white pages" DUAs: this is a reflection of the current information
 base.  Nevertheless much of the document will be applicable to DUAs
 developed for other types of Directory usage.
 Please send comments to the author or to the discussion group <osi-
 ds@CS.UCL.AC.UK>.

Table of Contents

 1.  Overview................................................       2
 2.  General Information.....................................       3
 3.  Conformance to OSI Standards............................       5
     3.1    Directory protocols..............................       5
     3.2    Protocol stacks..................................       5
     3.3    Schema ..........................................       5
     3.4    DIT structure  ..................................       5
 4.  Conformance to Research Community Standards.............       6
 5.  The General Style of the DUA............................       6
 6.  Schema..................................................       7
     6.1    Object Classes and Attribute Types...............       7
     6.2    DIT structure....................................       8
 7.  Entering queries........................................       9

Barker [Page 1] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

 8.  Strategy for locating entries...........................       9
 9.  Displaying results......................................      10
 10. Association Handling....................................      11
 11. Suitability for management..............................      12
 12. Query Resolution........................................      13
 13. International Languages.................................      16
 14. User Friendliness.......................................      16
 15. Operational Use.........................................      17
 16. Security Considerations.................................      19
 17. Author's Address........................................      19

1. Overview

 The purpose of this document is to define some metrics by which DUA
 products can be measured.  It should be first be noted that the use
 of the term "DUA" is rather misleading.  There is an assumption here
 that the DUA is implemented correctly and is able to "talk" valid
 X.500 protocol: this is a sine qua non.  Instead, this document seeks
 to draw out the characteristics of Directory user interfaces.
 However, the term DUA is persisted with as it is used by most people
 when referring to Directory user interfaces.  The format of these DUA
 metrics is essentially a questionnaire which extracts a detailed
 description of a user interface.  DUAs come in very different forms.
 Many make use of windowing environments, offering a "high-tech" view
 of the Directory, while others are designed to work in a terminal
 environment.  Some interfaces offer extensive control over the
 Directory, and thus may be well-suited to Directory managers, while
 others are aimed more at the novice user.  Some interfaces are
 configurable to allow searches for any attribute in any part of the
 DIT, while others lack this generality but are focussed on handling
 the most typical queries well.  In many aspects, it is almost
 impossible to say that one DUA is better than other from looking at
 the responses to question in this document.  A flexible management
 tool will be better for management than a DUA aimed at servicing
 simple look-ups, and vice-versa.  Furthermore, in other areas, there
 are several radically different approaches to a problem, but it is
 not as yet clear whether one approach is better than another.  One
 example of this is the extent to which a DUA provides an abstraction
 of the underlying DIT hierarchy, either emphasising the world as a
 tree or trying to conceal this from the user.
 However, other aspects, such as whether the DUA can actually find the
 entries required, and if so, how quickly, can be directly measured in
 some way.  Throughout this document, some of the questions posed are
 annotated with a square-bracketed points score and an explanation as
 to how the points should be allocated.  For example, a question might
 be appended with "[2 if yes]", indicating score 2 points for an
 affirmative answer to that question.  These points scores should be

Barker [Page 2] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

 collated in Table 1 at the end of the document, and this table
 constitutes a measure of the DUA. The metrics are on a section by
 section basis, which should help the reader who is seeking, for
 example, a DUA with good management capabilities which runs on a wide
 variety of platforms, to focus on the critical aspects of a DUA for
 the particular requirement.

2. General Information

 This section contains general information about the implementation
 under discussion.
 1.  Name of the implementation ......................................
 2.  Version number of the DUA described in this document ............
 3.  Are further versions planned?  [3 if yes] .......................
 4.  Name and address of supplier or person to contact ...............
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
 5.  Describe the hardware and software platforms on which the DUA will
     run.  Some DUAs are split into a user interface part, and a DUA
     server part, communicating by means of a protocol.  If the DUA is
     of the type where the DUA protocol machinery and user agent are
     implemented in a single process, complete only the user interface
     section, and indicate "n/a" for the DUA server and
     communications protocol questions.
    (a)  User interface part [1 per platform, up to a maximum of 4]
         i.  Hardware (If appropriate, can summarise as, for example,
        ii.  O/S (state version if critical)
             A.  UNIX (be sure to indicate which flavour - e.g., SYSV,
                 BSD, SUNOS, etc) ....................................
              ........................................................
             B.  VMS) ................................................
             C.  MS-DOS ..............................................

Barker [Page 3] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

             D.  MS-Windows ..........................................
             E.  Macintosh ...........................................
             F.  Other) ..............................................
    (b)  DUA server part (or n/a) ....................................
         i.  Hardware (If appropriate, can summarise as, for example,
             "generic UNIX platform", or "386 PC") ...............
        ii.  O/S (state version if critical)
             A.  UNIX (be sure to indicate which flavour - e.g., SYSV,
                 BSD, SUNOS, etc) ....................................
             B.  VMS) ................................................
             C.  MS-DOS ..............................................
             D.  Macintosh ...........................................
             E.  Other) ..............................................
       iii.  How does the user interface communicate with the DUA
             server?
             A.  Directory Assistance Service, as described in RFC1202
              ........................................................
             B.  DIXIE protocol, as described in RFC1249 .............
             C.  LDAP protocol, as described in Internet Draft OSI-DS
                 26
             D.  Other ...............................................
    (c)  Name any other software required to run the DUA which is not
         supplied with the operating system or with the DUA software
         itself.  Examples might include X.500 DAP libraries, or
         communications software .....................................
 6.  Is the software free?  If the DUA needs other packages, are these
     also freely available?  [3 if completely free] ..................
  ....................................................................

Barker [Page 4] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

3. Conformance to OSI Standards

3.1 Directory protocols

 7.  Please list all conformance testing work applied to the DUA
     implementation (here the term DUA is used correctly in the sense
     of the DUA protocol machinery) [2 if any conformance work has been
     done] ...........................................................
  ....................................................................

3.2 Protocol stacks

 For the next two questions, [2 per stack supported for up to 4
 stacks]
 8.  Which of the following transport and network layer protocols does
     the DUA support:
    (a)  TP.x over CONS (state transport class) ......................
    (b)  TP.4 over CLNS ..............................................
 9.  Does the DUA support other transport and "network" layer
     protocols?
    (a)  TP.x over RFC1006 over TCP/IP (state transport class) .......
    (b)  TP.x over X.25(1980) (state transport class) ................
    (c)  State any other options supported.  .........................
 10. Does the DUA also run over any lightweight stack?  If so, describe
     it with reference to the OSI seven layer model [3] ..............
  ....................................................................

3.3 Schema

 11. Does the DUA support the full schema in X.520 and X.521 (y/n)?
     (Omissions should be described in response to a later question) [2
     for full schema support] ........................................

3.4 DIT structure

 12. Does the DUA only follow object class hierarchies which conform to
     the suggested DIT structure in X.521?............................

Barker [Page 5] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

4. Conformance to Research Community Standards

 The COSINE and Internet Directory Pilots have agreed a set of
 extensions to the standard, which make for a more cohesive pilot.
 This section is about conformance to these extensions.
 13. Does the DUA fully support RFC1274, "The COSINE and Internet
     X.500 Schema" (y/n)?  (Omissions should be described in response
     to a later question) [2 for full support] .......................
 14. Can the DUA handle referrals whose network addresses conform to
     RFC1277, "Encoding Network Addresses to support operation over
     non-OSI lower layers"?  [2 if yes] .............................
 15. Does the DUA handle the Distinguished Name string syntax described
     in OSI-DS 23, "A String Representation of Distinguished Names"
     [2 if yes] ......................................................
  ....................................................................
 16. Does the DUA use the user-friendly naming query resolution
     described in OSI-DS 24, "Using the OSI Directory to achieve User
     Friendly Naming" [2 if yes] ....................................
 17. Does the DUA make use of the Quality of Service schema extensions
     described in OSI-DS 15, "Handling QOS (Quality of service) in the
     Directory" [2 if yes] ..........................................

5. The General Style of the DUA

 18. Is this a "white pages" interface, designed to give access to
     information about people within organisations?  If not, state the
     types of information at which this interface is targetted .......
  ....................................................................
 19. If this is a white pages DUA, who is it principally designed to
     serve?  Indicate more than one of the following categories if
     appropriate (but please do not fill in so may categories as to
     hide due emphasis):  [mark allocated should be the highest for any
     single classification]
    (a)  The ordinary user, who has no understanding of X.500, the
         hierarchical DIT, the state of advancement of the pilot, etc.
         [10] ........................................................
    (b)  A secretary who wants to do telephone or room number look-ups
         within their department or organisation [8] .................
    (c)  A computer-literate user, who habitually uses a wide-range of

Barker [Page 6] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

         network services [6] ........................................
    (d)  An organisation's (or department's) data manager [4] ........
    (e)  A Directory system manager [2] ..............................
 20. Which best describes the use the DUA makes of the user's terminal?
    (a)  Scrolling, line-mode interface ..............................
    (b)  Full screen, "vt100" style interface ......................
    (c)  X-Windows ...................................................
    (d)  MS-Windows ..................................................
    (e)  Macintosh ...................................................
    (f)  Other .......................................................
 21. Does the DUA tend to emphasise or de-emphasise the DIT hierarchy?
  ....................................................................
 22. Describe the interface in your own terms (up to about 50 words)
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................

6. Schema

6.1 Object Classes and Attribute Types

 Some DUAs are tightly focussed on answering particular queries:  for
 example, white pages look-ups for information about people.  Others
 offer more general capabilities.  Please answer this question
 accordingly.
 23. If the DUA has a tight focus, state:
    (a)  The target object classes ...................................
      ................................................................
    (b)  The default attribute types .................................
      ................................................................

Barker [Page 7] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

    (c)  Other attribute types which may be configured.  This might be
         answered as, for example, "all barring photo and audio", or
         as a list of supported attribute types ......................
      ................................................................
 24. If the DUA has more general capabilities, state:
    (a)  State any object classes in X.521 which cannot be searched for
      ................................................................
    (b)  State any object classes in RFC1274 which cannot be searched
         for..........................................................
      ................................................................
    (c)  State any attributes in X.521 which cannot be displayed......
      ................................................................
    (d)  State any attributes in RFC1274 which cannot be displayed....
      ................................................................

6.2 DIT structure

 25. DUAs often have a default object class hierarchy (e.g., it might
     assume countries at the root of the DIT, organisations immediately
     under countries, and people somewhere under organisations.
     Describe the type of hierarchy which the DUA most closely accords
     to:
    (a)  Rigid .......................................................
    (b)  Rigid, but several hierarchies supported ....................
    (c)  Default hierarchy offered, but many hierarchies are supported
      ................................................................
    (d)  Default hierarchy offered, but DUA fully flexible ...........
    (e)  No default hierarchy, DUA fully flexible ....................
 26. If a default hierarchy is offered, please describe it ...........
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
 27. State any hierarchies, which are valid according to X.521's
     suggested DIT structure, but which cannot be queried (exclude
     hierarchies which cannot be queried because the DUA does not query
     for entries of particular object classes) .......................

Barker [Page 8] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

  ....................................................................

7. Entering queries

 The term "querying" is used here as a generic term for finding an
 entry, whether it be as a simple look-up, or the prelude to a
 modification operation.
 28. Which best describes the query entry style?
    (a)  Form filling (user responds to a set of prompts) ............
         i.  Query specified first, then resolved ....................
        ii.  Query entry and resolution mixed ........................
       iii.  Both modes possible .....................................
    (b)  Queries entered as "user-friendly names" ..................
    (c)  Querying is by "navigating" around the DIT, the user
         searching and selecting .....................................
    (d)  Other (please describe) .....................................
      ................................................................

8. Strategy for locating entries

 A number of strategies are employed by DUAs to find the entry the
 user is looking for.  These have implications for user-friendliness
 and performance.  For example, an interface which makes extensive use
 of search operations may be excellent at finding entries, but at the
 cost of being intolerably slow.
 29. Which of the following strategies most closely accords with the
     behaviour of the DUA?
    (a)  The DUA always uses search operations to find entries .......
    (b)  The DUA offers users a list of entries, and invites the user
         to select from the list .....................................
    (c)  The DUA only tries read operations (i.e., the DN must be
         exactly right) ..............................................
    (d)  The DUA tries read operations first, then searches for
         something similar if no entry can be found ..................

Barker [Page 9] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

    (e)  The DUA tries read operations first, then offers a list of
         possible entries if no entry can be found ...................
    (f)  User explicitly controls the X.500 operation which is invoked
    (g)  Other.  Please describe......................................
      ................................................................
 30. Does the DUA allow a user to "list" (either by the list
     operation or by a single level search operation) all the child
     entries of a node (notwithstanding administrative limits)?  .....
 31. Does the DUA follow aliases?  ...................................
     If so, does it do so:
    (a)  Always?  ....................................................
    (b)  Optionally?  ................................................
 32. Will the DUA optionally follow links to other entries by using
     attributes such as seeAlso and roleOccupant with a DN syntax?  ..

9. Displaying results

 33. Are the strings used to describe attribute types freely and
     independently configurable?  [2] ................................
 34. Name any attribute types where the attribute values may be
     presented in local formats?  (For example, it may be possible to
     configure the display of telephone numbers so that local numbers
     are shown as extensions, rather than with the full international
     dialling code.)  [1 per attribute, up to a maximum of 4] ........
  ....................................................................
 35. Does the DUA allow for the display of more than one result at a
     time (showing attribute values other than the name of the entry)?
     If so, how many entries may be displayed in response to a single
     query?  [2 if feature provided] .................................
  ....................................................................
 36. Does the DUA support the notion of a quick synopsis, where a small
     core of attributes is retrieved initially, and a larger set is
     returned if required?  [2 if yes] ...............................
 37. What does the DUA do with attribute types it doesn't support in
     its sub-schema, but which have a standard syntax?  ..............

Barker [Page 10] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

 38. What does the DUA do with attributes which have are not in its
     sub-schema, and which have a non-standard syntax?
    (a)  Ignore them?  ...............................................
    (b)  Tell user, but don't display?  ..............................
    (c)  Display hex BER encoded value?  .............................
    (d)  Display in some other format?  ..............................

10. Association Handling

 This section is concerned with how a DUA handles its association with
 the Directory.
 39. How/where is the access point to the Directory configured?  If
     more than one method, indicate which ways are possible.  [1 per
     method, up to maximum of 3]
    (a)  In a system-wide tailor file ................................
    (b)  In a per user tailor file ...................................
    (c)  As a run-time command line argument .........................
    (d)  Other.  Please describe .....................................
      ................................................................
 40. Does the DUA allow for automatic connection to a back-up DSA if
     the access point DSA is unavailable?  [2 if yes] ................
 41. Can the DUA keep connections open to more than one DSA at a time?
     [1 if yes] ......................................................
  ....................................................................
 42. Does the DUA keep an idle connection open to the DSA(s).  If not,
     describe the timeout strategy.  [1 if yes] ......................
  ....................................................................
 43. Does the DUA handle referrals automatically?  [2 if yes] ........
     If not:  does the DUA handle referrals at all?  [1 if yes] ......
 44. Does the DUA make use of asynchronous operations?
    (a)  Does the DUA bind asynchronously?  [2 if yes]................
    (b)  Are the operations handled asynchronously?  .................

Barker [Page 11] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

         If so, is this true for:
         i.  All operations?  [2 if yes] .............................
        ii.  Some operations?  [1 if yes] ............................
 45. Does the DUA use size and time limits by default?  [2 if no
     limits, or limits may be over-ridden] If so:  ...................
    (a)  What size limit is used?  ...................................
    (b)  What time limit is used?  ...................................
    (c)  Are these limits overridable?  ..............................

11. Suitability for management

 This section is intended to establish the range of operations
 supported by the DUA and, in particular, whether it is suitable for
 management tasks.
 46. Is it possible to invoke all the operations in the Directory
     Abstract Service?  If not, say which operations it does use [2 if
     all] ............................................................
  ....................................................................
 47. Is the user given full control over the service controls?  If not,
     say which may be controlled, or none at all [2 if full, 1 if some
     control] ........................................................
  ....................................................................
 48. Is it possible to manage system attributes with the DUA? If so,
     indicate which DSA implementations for which this DUA provides
     management capabilities.  .......................................
    (a)  Knowledge [1]................................................
    (b)  Replication information [1] .................................
    (c)  Other .......................................................
 49. Access control notwithstanding, does the DUA allow the following?
    (a)  Attribute management [2 for all below, 1 for some]
         i.  Addition ................................................
        ii.  Modification ............................................

Barker [Page 12] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

       iii.  Deletion ................................................
    (b)  Entry management [2 for all below, 1 for some]
         i.  Addition ................................................
        ii.  Modification ............................................
       iii.  Deletion ................................................
        iv.  Renaming ................................................

12. Query Resolution

 This section discusses the process of query resolution.  While two
 DUAs may both be able to resolve a query using the same information,
 one may do so much more quickly than the other.  Some DUAs may be
 more "economic" in their use of DAP operations to achieve the same
 results.  Some DUAs may find the correct results even when the users'
 input corresponds rather weakly to Directory names.  Three aspects of
 query resolution are measured:
  o  Does the DUA actually find the required entry?
  o  If the required entry is found, how many entries were returned as
     well?
  o  How "expensive" was the query in terms of underlying X.500
     operations, whether the query was resolved successfully or not?
 The following set of queries might all conceivably be resolved such
 that the author's Directory entry be found.  The queries are split
 into 2 groups:  the first group SHOULD pose no difficulties for a
 reasonable DUA; the second group are more problematic.  In each case,
 award [2] marks if the query found the author's entry successfully.
 The expensiveness of each query should be measured using the
 following formula, which introduces the notion of SearchStones!  The
 SearchStone rating is calculated by adding together the total
 operations used in attempting to resolve a query, weighted thus:
  o  Bind [5]
  o  Read operation [1]
  o  List operation [2]
  o  Search single level for countries, organisations or
     localities [3]

Barker [Page 13] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

  o  Search single level for organisational units, people or roles [3]
  o  Search subtree [5]
    Note: The single level searches have been separated into two
    categories in acknowledgement that certain types of search are
    much more likely to span multiple DSAs than others.  The
    weightings are the same for the moment because of the
    pervasiveness of the Quipu implementation, which replicates all
    sibling entries in a single DSA, whatever the level in the DIT.
 The notion of SearchStones merits some further explanation and the
 statement of some caveats.
 The idea is to give some broad brush view of the work being
 undertaken by a DUA to retrieve an entry.  There will be some
 correspondence between a low SearchStone rating and a DUA responding
 quickly, and vice-versa, although this correlation is not consistent,
 for reasons given below.  It would be desirable to be able to have
 some timing information for the resolution of queries, but such
 results would only be meaningful if the tests were for target entries
 widely distributed throughout the DIT. Maybe this is something for
 the future?  In the meantime it is worth noting some of the factors
 which militate against simple minded interpretation of the
 SearchStones.
  o  The DIT is not uniform, with the depth varying considerably
  o  While the DIT is currently mastered mostly by DSAs of a single
     implementation, this will be decreasingly the case, and other DSAs
     may have very different performance profiles.
  o  Different directory domains are already adopting different
     strategies on information replication with profound performance
     implications.
  o  No weighting is given to different search filters, or to boolean
     combinations of filters.
 While acknowledging the difficulty of the exercise, there are counter
 arguments:
  o  Some DUAs are better than others at finding the required results
  o  Some DUAs will get the required results more quickly than most
  o  DUA designers have to build DUAs in the knowledge that the DIT is
     heterogeneous with respect to DSA implementation and DIT structure

Barker [Page 14] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

 One possible way forward would be to refine the test queries such
 that they better represented the diversity of the DIT. However, as a
 first step, the tests are restricted to queries which could
 reasonably be constructed as searches for the author's entry.  The
 author's entry is held in part of the DIT which is representative of
 much of the current DIT.  It is suggested that in order to normalise
 the tests as much as possible, that testing be performed by
 connecting to the target DSA directly.  The DSA's name is "cn=Vicuna,
 c=GB", and the addresses of the DSA may be found in the presentation
 address attribute for that entry.  Note that the SearchStone rating
 should be shown even for queries which cannot be resolved.
 First, the straightforward queries:
 50. NAME=Paul Barker, OU=Computer Science, O=University College
     London, C=GB
 51. NAME=Paul Barker, OU=Computer Science, O=UCL, C=GB
 52. NAME=Barker, OU=Computer, O=UCL, C=GB
 53. NAME=Barker, O=UCL, C=GB
 54. NAME=p barker, O=university college, C=GB
 55. NAME=paul b, OU=cs, O=university college, C=GB
 More difficult queries:
 56. NAME=p b, O=university college, C=uk
 57. NAME=Paul Barker, OU=Computer Networking, O=london college, C=GB
 58. NAME=Paul Baker (sic), OU=cs, O=ucl, C=Britain
 59. NAME=p baker (sic), O=UCL, C=England
 60. NAME=Paul Barker, OU=Directories, O=london, C=United Kingdom
 Other general questions:
 61. Will the DUA attempt a query of the form "Find all the Smiths in
     Britain"?  .....................................................
     If so, does it do it by:
    (a)  A single query under the country node?  .....................

Barker [Page 15] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

    (b)  Multiple queries under all organisation nodes?  .............
 62. Does the DUA allow "hands-off" querying whereby the details of a
     query may be entered in one go, and the DUA attempts to resolve
     the query without any further user intervention?  ...............

13. International Languages

 63. Does the DUA offer multi-lingual support.  If so:  ..............
    (a)  State which languages are already supported [1 per language up
         to a maximum of 3] ..........................................
      ................................................................
 64. Can the DUA handle national language characters not found in
     PrintableString?  [2 if yes] ....................................

14. User Friendliness

 65. Is run-time help available?  [2 if yes] .........................
     If so:
    (a)  Is context-sensitive help available?  [1 if yes] ............
    (b)  How many screens/windows?  ..................................
    (c)  How many bytes of help information?  [2 if more than 5 Kbytes
         of text, 1 if more than 3 Kbytes] ...........................
 66. Are the error messages terse renderings of the X.500 service
     errors, or user-friendly!?  As an example, provide the error
     message displayed to the user if an administrative limit is
     exceeded.  [2 if user-orientated, 1 if administrator-orientated, 0
     if no message at all] ...........................................
  ....................................................................
  ....................................................................
 67. If modify operations are provided, is there support for editing
     the attributes correctly with the appropriate syntax (e.g., does
     the DUA guide the user that addresses are of up to 6 lines of up
     to 30 characters; what support is given for entering distinguished
     names) [2 for postal address support, 2 for DN support, 1 for any
     other support] ..................................................
 68. Is the user allowed to see what sort of entries are in the
     Directory if they are unable to find the entry they are looking
     for?  [1 if yes] ................................................

Barker [Page 16] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

 69. Does the DUA allow automatic following of attributes with DN
     values, such as seeAlso and roleOccupant?  [1 if yes]............

15. Operational Use

 The DUA exists.  But is there any evidence to suggest that it is a
 usable tool?
 70. Is this DUA widely in use?  [5 if used by more than 20 orgs, 3 if
     by more than 10 orgs, 2 if by more than 5 orgs, 1 if used
     operationally to provide a service anywhere] ....................
    (a)  Is this DUA in use anywhere in the COSINE/Internet Pilot?  ..
      ................................................................
    (b)  Is this DUA in use in any other major pilot?  ...............
    (c)  Is this DUA in use anywhere else operationally?  ............
 71. Has this DUA been assessed by groups outside of the software
     developers or providers?  .......................................
 72. If so, are the assessments public?  Please provide copies of these
     assessments if they are available ...............................

Barker [Page 17] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

 __________________________________________________________
 |_____Section_____|_____Points____|______________________|
 |No._|Description_|Maximum_|Scored|______________________|
 |    |            |        |      |                      |
 |__2_|Gen_Info____|__10____|...___|__________n/a_________|
 |    |            |        |      |                      |
 |__3_|Conf_to_OSI_|__15____|...___|__________n/a_________|
 |    |Conf to Res |        |      |                      |
 |__4_|Comm_stds___|__10____|...___|__________n/a_________|
 |    |            |        |      |                      |
 |__5_|Gen_Style___|__10____|_...__|__________n/a_________|
 |    |            |        |      |                      |
 |__9_|Disp_Res____|__10____|_...__|__________n/a_________|
 |    |            |        |      |                      |
 |_10_|Assoc_hand._|__15____|_...__|__________n/a_________|
 |    |            |        |      |                      |
 |_11_|Man_cap_____|__10____|_...__|__________n/a_________|
 | 12 |Query res   |        |      |Search |No.  of other |
 |    |            |        |      |Stones |entries found |
 |____|Q._50_______|__2_____|_...__|_...___|:_...._....___|
 |    |            |        |      |       |              |
 |____|Q._51_______|__2_____|_...__|_...___|:_...._....___|
 |    |            |        |      |       |              |
 |____|Q._52_______|__2_____|_...__|_...___|:_...._....___|
 |    |            |        |      |       |              |
 |____|Q._53_______|__2_____|_...__|_...___|:_...._....___|
 |    |            |        |      |       |              |
 |____|Q._54_______|__2_____|_...__|_...___|:_...._....___|

Barker [Page 18] RFC 1431 DUA Metrics February 1993

 __________________________________________________________
 |_____Section_____|_____Points____|______________________|
 |No._|Description_|Maximum_|Scored|______________________|
 |    |            |        |      |       |              |
 |____|Q._55_______|__2_____|_...__|_...___|:_...._....___|
 |    |            |        |      |       |              |
 |____|Q._56_______|__2_____|_...__|_...___|:_...._....___|
 |    |            |        |      |       |              |
 |____|Q._57_______|__2_____|_...__|_...___|:_...._....___|
 |    |            |        |      |       |              |
 |____|Q._58_______|__2_____|_...__|_...___|:_...._....___|
 |    |            |        |      |       |              |
 |____|Q._59_______|__2_____|_...__|_...___|:_...._....___|
 |    |            |        |      |       |              |
 |____|Q._60_______|__2_____|_...__|_...___|:_...._....___|
 |    |            |        |      |                      |
 |_13_|Int_Lang____|__5_____|_...__|__________n/a_________|
 | 14 |User-fr     |        |      |                      |
 |    |            |        |      |                      |
 |    |Query DUA   |  10    | .... |         n/a          |
 |    |            |        |      |                      |
 |____|Modify_DUA__|__15____|_...__|__________n/a_________|
 |    |            |        |      |                      |
 |_15_|Op_use______|__5_____|_...__|__________n/a_________|
                         Table 1:  DUA Metrics

16. Security Considerations

 Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

17. Author's Address

 Paul Barker
 Department of Computer Science
 University College London
 Gower Street
 London
 WC1E 6BT
 United Kingdom
 Phone: +44 71 380 7366
 Fax:   +44 71 387 1397
 Email: P.Barker@cs.ucl.ac.uk

Barker [Page 19]

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